Alecrim - Depressão - TCC
Alecrim - Depressão - TCC
Alecrim - Depressão - TCC
Florianópolis
2012
Catalogação na fonte pela Biblioteca Universitária
da
Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
Inclui referências
Obrigada mãe!!!
Por seu doce, firme e incansável apoio diante das adversidades que passamos,
por ter abraçado minha ideologia, como se fosse sua,
e compartilhado todos os momentos de minha vida,
especialmente este.
AGRADECIMENTOS
1 INTRODUÇÃO.....................................................................25
1.1 Depressão e a relação com os antidepressivos........................25
1.2 A utilização de plantas medicinais..........................................33
1.2.1 Plantas medicinais como alternativa terapêutica para o
tratamento da depressão....................................................................35
1.2.2 Rosmarinus officinalis (Alecrim).............................................36
1.3 Modelos Animais de depressão...............................................38
1.3.1 Bulbectomia olfatória (BO)...................................................40
1.4 JUSTIFICATIVA.................................................................44
2. OBJETIVO..........................................................................45
2.1 OBJETIVOS GERAL..........................................................45
2.2 OBJETIVOS ESPECÍFICOS..............................................45
CAPÍTULO 1-.....................................................................................49
CAPÍTULO 2-.....................................................................................61
CAPÍTULO 3-.....................................................................................87
CAPÍTULO 4-...................................................................................117
CAPÍTULO 5- ................................................................................. .159
3. DISCUSSÃO GERAL ........................................................ .211
3.1 Potencial antidepressivo de Rosmarinus officinalis em
testes preditivos de atividade antidepressiva ..................................... .211
3.2 Envolvimento do sistema monoaminérgico no potencial
antidepressivo de Rosmarinus officinalis .......................................... .212
3.3 Potencial antidepressivo de frações, compostos isolados e óleo
essencial de Rosmarinus officinalis................................................... .216
3.4 Potencial antidepressivo do ácido ursólico, composto isolado de
Rosmarinus officinalis L. em camundongos: Evidência do envolvimento
do sistema dopaminérgico................................................... .............. .219
3.5 Potencial antidepressivo de Rosmarinus officinalis no modelo
de depressão, Bulbectomia Olfatória Bilateral (BO).................... .221
3.5.1 Fluoxetina reverte a hiperatividade, comportamento anedônico e
o aumento da atividade da acetilcolinesterase hipocampal induzida pela
BO em camundongos ........................................................................ .222
3.5.2 O extrato hidroalcóolico de Rosmarinus officinalis L.,
similarmente a fluoxetina, reverte o comportamento tipo-depressivo sem
alterar o déficit de aprendizado em camundongos
bulbectomizados.................................................................................229
4. CONCLUSÃO GERAL .............................................................. .235
5. REFERÊNCIAS............................................................................237
25
1. INTRODUÇÃO
1.4. JUSTIFICATIVA
2. OBJETIVOS
CAPÍTULO 1
a r t i c l e i n f o a b s t r a c t
Article history: Rosemary, Rosmarinus officinalis L. (Labiatae) has several therapeutic applications in folk medicine in curing
Received 14 November 2008 or managing a wide range of diseases, including depression. In this study, the effect of the hydroalcoholic
Received in revised form 13 February 2009 extract of the stems and leaves of this plant was investigated in two behavioral models, the forced swimming
Accepted 3 March 2009
test (FST) and tail suspension test (TST) in mice. The extract of R. officinalis produced an antidepressant-like
Available online 13 March 2009
effect, since the acute treatment of mice with the extract by p.o. route significantly reduced the immobility
Keywords:
time in the FST (100 mg/kg) and TST (10–100 mg/kg), as compared to a control group, without
Dopamine accompanying changes in ambulation in the open-field test. Moreover, the repeated administration (14 days)
Forced swimming test of the hydroalcoholic extract of R. officinalis by p.o. route also produced an antidepressant-like effect in the
Noradrenaline TST (100–300 mg/kg). The pretreatment of mice with p-chlorophenylalanine (PCPA, 100 mg/kg, i.p., an
Rosmarinus officinalis inhibitor of serotonin synthesis, for 4 consecutive days), NAN-190 (0.5 mg/kg, i.p., a 5-HT1A receptor
Serotonin antagonist), ketanserin (5 mg/kg, i.p., a 5-HT2A receptor antagonist), 1-(m-chlorophenyl) biguanide (mCPBG,
Tail suspension test 10 mg/kg, i.p., a 5-HT3 receptor agonist), prazosin (1 mg/kg, i.p., an α1-adrenoceptor antagonist), SCH23390
(0.05 mg/kg, s.c., a dopamine D1 receptor antagonist) or sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor
antagonist), but not yohimbine (1 mg/kg, i.p., an α2-adrenoceptor antagonist) was able to reverse the anti-
immobility effect of the extract (10 mg/kg, p.o.) in the TST. The combination of MDL72222, (0.1 mg/kg, i.p., a
5-HT3 receptor antagonist) with a sub-effective dose of the extract of R. officinalis (1 mg/kg, p.o.) produced
an anti-immobility effect in the TST. The results suggest that the antidepressant action of the extract of
R. officinalis is mediated by an interaction with the monoaminergic system and that this plant should be
further investigated as an alternative therapeutic approach for the treatment of depression.
© 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
0278-5846/$ – see front matter © 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2009.03.004
D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650 643
constituents as antidepressant agents, whose mechanism of action intraperitoneal (i.p.) route in a constant volume of 10 ml/kg body
involves an interaction with the monoaminergic system (Machado et al., weight, except SCH23390 that were administered by subcutaneous (s.c.)
2007; Müller, 2003; Rodrigues et al., 2002; Zhang, 2004). route (10 ml/kg body weight). Drugs were dissolved in saline except
Rosemary, Rosmarinus officinalis L. (Labiatae) is native to Europe, NAN-190 and MDL72222, that were diluted in saline with 1% Tween 80,
but has been cultivated in all Brazilian states. Some studies have sulpiride that was diluted in saline with 5% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO)
reported that the extract of this plant exerts a number of pharmaco- and fluoxetine that was dissolved in distillated water. Control animals
logical activities, such as hepatoprotective (Sotelo-Félix et al., 2002), received appropriate vehicle.
antibacterial (Del Campo et al., 2000), antithrombotic (Yamamoto The extract of R. officinalis (1–300 mg/kg, p.o.) was dissolved in
et al., 2005), antiulcerogenic (Dias et al., 2000), diuretic (Haloui et al., distillated water and administered acutely by oral route (p.o.) 60 min
2000), antidiabetic (Bakirel et al., 2008), antioxidant (Bakirel et al., before the FST, TST or open-field test. Alternatively, mice were
2008), antinociceptive (González-Trujano et al., 2007) and antiin- administered daily with the extract for 14 days by p.o. route 24 h
flammatory (Altinier et al., 2007). An ethnopharmacological use of before the TST or open-field test. The dissolution of the extract was
R. officinalis in the treatment of depression, among other uses, was freshly done from the liophylized power immediately before its
reported (Heinrich et al., 2006). administration by gavage. A control group received distillated water as
Considering the therapeutic application of R. officinalis in folk vehicle. Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o., a conventional antidepressant)
medicine in the management of mood disorders, the present work was used as a positive control.
sought to investigate the effect of the hydroalcoholic extract of this To address some of the mechanisms by which the extract of
plant in FST and TST, predictive models of antidepressant activity. R. officinalis causes antidepressant-like action in the TST, animals were
Additionally, the involvement of the monoaminergic system in its pretreated with different pharmacological agents.
antidepressant-like action through the use of pharmacological To investigate a possible contribution of the serotonergic system to
procedures was also investigated. the effect of the extract of R. officinalis in reducing the immobility time
in the TST, animals were pretreated with PCPA (100 mg/kg, an
2. Methods inhibitor of serotonin synthesis) or vehicle, once a day, for 4
consecutive days (Brocardo et al., 2008; Eckeli et al., 2000; Kaster
2.1. Plant material and preparation of the hydroalcoholic extract of et al., 2005; Machado et al., 2007; Rodrigues et al., 2002). Then, 24 h
R. officinalis after the last PCPA or saline injection, animals were acutely treated
with the extract of R. officinalis (10 mg/kg, p.o.), fluoxetine (10 mg/kg,
Stems and leaves of R. officinalis (Labiatae) were collected in Santo p.o., positive control) or vehicle and were tested in the TST 60 min
Amaro do Imperatriz, Santa Catarina, and identified by Dr. Daniel later. The dose of fluoxetine was chosen based on previous studies
Falkenberg, from the Department of Botany, Federal University of from our group (Cunha et al., 2008; Machado et al., 2007).
Santa Catarina. A voucher specimen (Excicata number 34918) was In order to investigate the possible involvement of the 5-HT
deposited in the Herbarium of the Department of Botany, Federal receptor subtypes system in the antidepressant-like effect of the
University of Santa Catarina, Santa Catarina, Brazil. Dried aerial parts extract, mice were pretreated with NAN-190 (0.5 mg/kg, i.p. a 5-HT1A
of R. officinalis (600 g), was submitted to maceration in ethanol (96%) receptor antagonist), ketanserin (5 mg/kg, i.p., a 5-HT2A receptor
during fifteen days at room temperature (25 ± 2 °C). Thereafter, the antagonist), or vehicle and after 30 min they received the extract of
extract was filtered and then concentrated under reduced pressure (at R. officinalis (10 mg/kg, p.o.) or vehicle injection before being tested in
approximately 60°). The maceration was repeated three times. After the TST 60 min later. To assess the possible involvement of the 5-HT3
removing the solvent by liophylization, this procedure gave 61 g of a receptor in its antidepressant-like effect, the animals were pretreated
green solid and dry ethanolic crude extract (10.2% w/w yield). with 1-(m-chlorophenyl) biguanide hydrochloride (mCPBG) (10 mg/
kg, i.p., a selective 5-HT3 receptor agonist) or vehicle and after 30 min
2.2. Animals they received the extract of R. officinalis (10 mg/kg, p.o.) or vehicle
injection before being tested in the TST 60 min later. In addition, in
Male Swiss mice (60 to 80 days old weighing 40–50 g) were another set of experiment mice were pretreated with sub-effective
maintained at constant room temperature (22–25 °C) with free access dose of MDL72222 (0.1 mg/kg, i.p., a selective 5-HT3 receptor
to water and food, under a 12:12 h light:dark cycle (lights on at antagonist) or vehicle and after 30 min they were treated with a
07:00 h). Mice were allowed to acclimatize to the holding room for sub-effective dose of the extract of R. officinalis (1 mg/kg, p.o.) or
48 h before the behavioral procedure. Animals were randomly vehicle injection before being tested in the TST 60 min later.
distributed into specified experimental groups. All experiments To investigate the possible involvement of the noradrenergic and
were carried out between 11:00 and 16:00 h, with each animal used dopaminergic systems on the antidepressant-like effect of the extract in
only once (N = 6–11 animals per group). The procedures in this study the TST, animals were pretreated with prazosin (1 mg, i.p., an α1-
were performed in accordance with the National Institute of Health adrenoceptor antagonist), yohimbine (1 mg/kg, i.p., an α2-adrenoceptor
Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and approved by the antagonist), SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c., a dopamine D1 receptor
Ethics Committee of the Institution. All efforts were made to minimize antagonist) or sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor
animals suffering and to reduce the number of animals used in the antagonist), and after 30 min they received the extract of R. officinalis
experiments. (10 mg/kg, p.o.) or vehicle and were tested in the TST 60 min later.
The administration schedule and the doses of the drugs used were
2.3. Drugs and treatment chosen on the basis of experiments previously performed in our
laboratory and literature data confirm the efficacy of the above-
The drugs used in the present study were: ketanserin tartarate, 1-(2- mentioned protocols (Brocardo et al., 2008; Kaster et al., 2005;
methoxyphenyl)-4[-(2-phthalimido)butyl]piperazine) (NAN-190), p- Machado et al., 2007; O'Neill and Conway, 2001; Redrobe and Bourin,
chlorophenylalanine methyl ester (PCPA), tropanyl 3, 5-dichlorobenzo- 1997; Rodrigues et al., 2002; Yamada et al., 2004).
ate (MDL72222), 1-(m-chlorophenyl) biguanide hydrochloride
(mCPBG), sulpiride, prazosin, yohimbine, (R)-(+)-7-chloro-8- 2.4. Forced swimming test (FST)
hydroxy-3-methyl-1-phenyl-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-1H-3-benzazepine
hydrochloride (SCH23390), fluoxetine (all from Sigma Chemical The FST has been used as a model predictive of antidepressant
Company, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.). All drugs were administered by effect (Cryan et al., 2002). The test procedure was carried out
644 D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650
according to the previously standardized and validated animal model locomotor activity and number of rearings was an indicative of the
in our laboratory (Brocardo et al., 2008; Eckeli et al., 2000; Kaster exploratory behavior (Felipe et al., 2007; Rodrigues et al., 1996). The
et al., 2005; Zomkowski et al., 2004). Mice were individually forced to number of crossings and rearings was registered during a period of
swim in an open cylindrical container (diameter 10 cm, height 25 cm), 6 min. Animals were treated with the extract of R. officinalis (1, 10, 100
containing 19 cm of water (depth) at 25 ± 1 °C; the total duration of and 300 mg/kg, p.o.) or with vehicle by p.o. route 60 min before the
immobility was recorded during a 6-min period. Each mouse was experiments.
judged to be immobile when it ceased struggling and remained
floating motionless in the water, making only those movements
2.7. Statistical analysis
necessary to keep its head above water. A decrease in the duration of
immobility is indicative of an antidepressant-like effect (Porsolt et al.,
Comparisons between experimental and control groups were
1977). After the initial 2–3 min of vigorous activity the animals
performed by one (dose–response curves) or two-way ANOVA (study
showed a period of immobility by floating with minimum move-
of the mechanism of action) followed by Tukey's HSD test when
ments. An animal is considered to be immobile whenever it remained
appropriate. A value of P b 0.05 was considered to be significant.
floating passively in the water in a slightly hunched but upright
position, its nose above the water surface. The total immobility period
for the period of 6 min was recorded. 3. Results
Fig. 1. Effect of the acute treatment of mice with the hydroalcoholic extract of Rosmarinus officinalis (1–300 mg/kg, p.o.) on the immobility time in the FST (A) and TST (B) and on the
number of crossings (C) and rearings (D) in the open-field test. Each column represents the mean + S.E. of 6–10 animals. ** P b 0.01 compared with the vehicle-treated control (C).
D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650 645
field test as compared to the control group [F(4,41) = 0.47, depicted in Fig. 2C show that the treatment with extract of R. officinalis
P = 0.76]. (dose range 10–300 mg/kg, p.o.) and with fluoxetine did not
significantly alter the number of the rearings of mice in the open-field
3.2. Effect of repeated treatment with the hydroalcoholic extract of test as compared to control group [F(4,44)= 0.33, P = 0.85].
R. officinalis on the immobility time in the TST and locomotor and
exploratory activity in the open-field test 3.3. Investigation of some possible mechanisms underlying the
antidepressant-like effect of the extract of R. officinalis in the TST
In order to investigate if the antidepressant-like effect of the extract
of R. officinalis continues after a chronic administration (14 days), a Since 10 mg/kg of the extract of R. officinalis was the lowest acute
dose–response curve in the TST and open-field test were carried out. effective dose, all the experiments regarding the investigation of the
Fig. 2A shows that the extract given by oral route at 100 and 300 mg/kg mechanisms underlying the antidepressant-like effect of the extract of
decreased the immobility time in the TST, as compared to the control R. officinalis were performed in the TST using this dose.
group. The percent of reduction in the immobility time in TST was 29.7%
and 27.8%, respectively. Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.), used as a positive 3.3.1. Involvement of the serotonergic system
control, also produced a significant reduction in the immobility time Fig. 3A shows that the pretreatment of mice with the inhibitor of
(22.8% of reduction) in the TST. The one-way ANOVA revealed a serotonin synthesis PCPA (100 mg/kg, i.p., once a day for 4 consecutive
significant effect of the treatment in the TST [F(4,35)= 6.366, P b 0.01]. days) significantly prevented the decrease in the immobility time elicited
However, either the extract or fluoxetine caused no change in the by the extract (10 mg/kg, p.o.). The results obtained in this experiment
locomotor activity of mice as compared to control group (Fig. 2B), as were analyzed by a two-way ANOVA. There was a significant effect of
shown by one-way ANOVA [F(4,44) = 0.187, P = 0.943]. The results PCPA pretreatment [F(1,35) = 18.31, P b 0.01], extract or fluoxetine
treatment [F(2,35)=21.39, P b 0.01] and of extract or fluoxetine X PCPA
interaction [F(2,35)=5.76, Pb 0.01]. Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.), used as a
positive control, produced a significant reduction in the immobility time
in the TST, which was significantly prevented by PCPA pretreatment.
Moreover, the pretreatment of mice with NAN-190 (0.5 mg/kg, i.p.) also
prevented the antidepressant-like effect elicited by the extract. A two-way
ANOVA showed significant differences for NAN-190 [F(1,30)=8.26,
Pb 0.01], extract [F(1,30)=9.04, Pb 0.01] and extract×NAN-190 interac-
tion [F(1,30)=16.65, P b 0.01](Fig. 3B). Fig. 3C shows that the pretreat-
ment of mice with ketanserin (5 mg/kg, i.p.) also prevented the action of
the extract in the TST. The two-way ANOVA revealed a main effect of the
ketanserin [F(1,33)=20.19, Pb 0.01], extract[F(1,33)=17.38, Pb 0.01] and
extract×ketanserin interaction [F(1,33)=25.39, Pb 0.01]. The results
depicted in Fig. 3D shows that the pretreatment of mice with mCPBG
(10 mg/kg, i.p.) prevented the anti-immobility effect elicited by the
extract. A two-way ANOVA showed significant differences for the extract
[F(1,36)=5.28, P b 0.05] and extract×mCPBG interaction [F(1,36)=7.89,
Pb 0.01], but not mCPBG [F(1,36)=3.71, P=0.06]. Fig. 3E shows that the
administration of MDL72222 administered at a dose (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) that
per se produced no effect in the TST, in combination with a sub-effective
dose of the extract (1 mg/kg, p.o.), reduced the immobility time in the TST
as compared with each one alone. The results were analyzed by a two-way
ANOVA that showed a significant effect of MDL72222 [F(1,31)=16.23,
Pb 0.01], extract [F(1,31)=13.14, Pb 0.01] and extract×MDL72222 inter-
action [F(1,31)=4.24, Pb 0.05].
646 D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650
Fig. 3. Effect of pretreatment of mice with PCPA (100 mg/kg, i.p. once a day for 4 consecutive days, panel A), NAN-190 (0.5 mg/kg, i.p., panel B), ketanserin (5 mg/kg, i.p., panel C) or
mCPBG (10 mg/kg, i.p., panel D) on the hydroalcoholic extract of Rosmarinus officinalis (10 mg/kg, p.o.)-induced reduction in immobility time in the TST. Effect of combined
treatment of mice with the extract of Rosmarinus officinalis (1 mg/kg, p.o) and MDL72222 (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.) on the immobility time in the TST (panel E). Each column represents the
mean + S.E. of 6–10 animals. ** P b 0.01 compared with the vehicle-treated control. # P b 0.01 as compared with the extract or fluoxetine alone (not with the extract alone)
also able to prevent the anti-immobility effect of the extract in the TST. The able stress has been hypothesized to reflect behavioral despair which
two-way ANOVA revealed a main effect of the sulpiride [F(1,24)=10.48, in turn may reflect depressive disorders in humans. There is, indeed, a
Pb 0.01], extract [F(1,24)=6.77, Pb 0.05] and of the extract×sulpiride significant correlation between clinical potency and effectiveness of
interaction [F(1,24)=24.21, Pb 0.01]. antidepressants in both models (Cryan et al., 2002; Porsolt et al., 1977;
Steru et al., 1985).
4. Discussion In the present study, our results demonstrate that the acute treatment
with hydroalcoholic extract of R. officinalis produced a significant
There is an increasing interest in the study of the antidepressant antidepressant-like response in both FST and TST. Moreover, our study
effect of herbs, since treatment of depression with conventional showed that the repeated administration (14 days) of the hydroalcoholic
antidepressants (monoamine oxidase inhibitors, tricyclics, selective extract of R. officinalis was also able to produce an antidepressant-like
serotonin reuptake inhibitors, selective noradrenaline reuptake effect in the TST. These results are in accordance with the reported
inhibitors) provides a complete remission just for 50% of the ethnopharmacological effect of this plant (Heinrich et al., 2006). It is
individuals (Nestler et al., 2002). Research reports have been noteworthy that the effect produced by the extract of this plant was
indicated that herbal extracts and their constituents including Hy- comparable to the one produced by the classical antidepressant fluoxetine
pericum perforatum, Curcuma longa, Ginkgo biloba, Schinus molle, (10 mg/kg, p.o.). The antidepressant-like effect of the acutely adminis-
among others, exert antidepressant-like effect in animal models of tered extract was observed at a lower dose in the TST (10 mg/kg, p.o.) than
depression (Machado et al., 2007; McGarry et al., 2007; Peng et al., in the FST (100 mg/kg, p.o.). The underlying principle measuring the lack
2007; Rodrigues et al., 2002; Sakakibara et al., 2006; Wang et al., of active coping behavior is identical in the TSTand FST, but their variability
2008; Zhang, 2004; Zhang et al., 2007). The FST and TST are widely in response to certain antidepressants indicates potentially different
used for screening potential antidepressants. Antidepressants reduce substrates and neurochemical pathways mediating performance in these
the immobility time in both FST and TST. The immobility behavior tests. These issues may underlie the observed behavioral differences (Bai
displayed in rodents when subjected to an unavoidable and inescap- et al., 2001). Furthermore, one of the most important differences between
D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650 647
these two models is the response to drugs in both tests and the apparent
increased sensitivity of the TST. The mouse FST has not traditionally been
viewed as a consistently sensitive model for detecting selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitor activity, whereas these antidepressants are generally
reported as active in the TST (Cryan et al., 2005). Moreover, the TST was
proposed to have a greater pharmacological sensitivity as compared with
the FST (Thierry et al., 1986; Cryan et al., 2005).
To avoid false positive results in the FST and TST, it is important to
rule out the possibility that reductions in immobility time were not
merely a result from psychostimulant effects of the extract. In our
study, either acute or repeated treatment with R. officinalis did not
increase locomotor and exploratory activity at doses that produced an
antidepressant-like effect, indicating a specific effect of this plant on
behavioral models predictive of antidepressant activity.
The monoamine hypothesis based on the deficiency of one or several
monoamines is commonly evoked to explain the physiopathology of
depression. This hypothesis initially based on noradrenaline (Schildk-
raut et al., 1965) and serotonin deficiency (Coppen, 1967) has been
extended to dopamine (Randrup et al., 1975). Most of the antidepres-
sants currently used today exert their primary biochemical effects by
regulating synaptic concentrations of serotonin, noradrenaline and/or
dopamine (Elhwuegi, 2004; Páez-Pereda, 2005). Drugs inhibiting the
uptake of serotonin, noradrenaline and dopamine (triple reuptake
inhibitors) that have been recently developed could produce a more
rapid onset of action and possess greater efficacy than traditional
antidepressants (Chen and Skolnick, 2007). Hence, considering that the
monoaminergic system is implicated in the pathophysiology and
treatment of human depression (Elhwuegi, 2004; Holsboer, 2004), the
present study aimed to investigate the influence of pharmacological
agents that modulate the monoaminergic system on the antidepressant-
like activity of the extract R. officinalis (10 mg/kg, p.o.) in the TSC. Fig. 5. Effect of pretreatment of mice with SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c., panel A) or with
sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p., panel B) on the hydroalcoholic extract of Rosmarinus officinalis
The serotonergic system has long been implicated in the etiology of
(10 mg/kg, p.o.) -induced reduction in immobility time in the TST. Each column represents the
depression. Some of the most compelling evidence involves the mean+S.E. of 6–8 animals. ** Pb 0.01 compared with the vehicle-treated control. # Pb 0.01 as
alleviation of depression caused by serotonin selective reuptake compared with the with the extract alone.
648 D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650
A decrease in 5-HT1A binding potential has been reported, as effect observed when mice were treated with MDL72222 (0.1 mg/kg,
determined by positron emission tomography, in depressed patients i.p.) in combination with a sub-effective dose of the extract of
in multiple forebrain areas, including the frontal cortex and R. officinalis (1 mg/kg, p.o.).
hippocampus (Drevets et al., 1999; Sargent et al., 2000). Therefore, a In parallel with the serotonergic system, the noradrenergic system
deficiency in the function and expression of 5-HT1A receptors is an has been a valuable target for antidepressants. Depression seems to be
important factor in the development of depression (Leitch et al., associated with a hypofunction of the noradrenergic system, and some
2003). In addition, the mechanism of action of several classes of antidepressants act by increasing the synaptic availability of norepi-
antidepressant drugs, such as tricyclics, SSRIs (selective serotonin nephrine (Elhwuegi, 2004; Taylor et al., 2005). In our experiments, the
reuptake inhibitors), MAOi (monoamine oxidase inhibitors) occur by pretreatment of mice with prazosin (an α1-adrenoceptor antagonist)
participation of the 5-HT1A receptors (Hensler, 2002), including the was able to reverse the antidepressant-like effect of the extract of R.
antidepressant-like action of some plants (Kim et al., 2007; Machado officinalis, whereas yohimbine (an α2-adrenoceptor antagonist) was
et al., 2007). Additionally, 5-HT1A receptors appear to be necessary for ineffective in reversing the immobility period in mice. This result
the effects of SSRI antidepressant drugs in both acute and chronic indicates that the extract may exert its effect in the TST by interacting
behavioral models (Mayorga et al., 2001). The SSRIs fluoxetine and with α1, but not with α2-adrenoceptors.
paroxetine failed to decrease immobility in the TST in 5-HT1A receptor In animal studies, the implication of the dopaminergic system in
mutant mice at a test dose that was active in wild-type and 5-HT1B depression has been essentially studied via the use of agonists that
receptor mutant mice. However, 5-HT1A receptor mutant mice still increase dopaminergic activity resulting in antidepressant-like effects
demonstrated an antidepressant-like response to the noradrenaline in animal model of depression (Basso et al., 2005; Renard et al., 2001).
reuptake inhibitor desipramine. These data suggest that the presence Moreover, several studies, including post mortem investigations,
of 5-HT1A receptors may be critical for the expression of the particularly of subjects with severe depression, have demonstrated
antidepressant-like behavioral responses of SSRIs in the TST (Mayorga reduced concentrations of dopamine metabolites both in the
et al., 2001). In our study, the pretreatment of mice with the 5-HT1A cerebrospinal fluid and in brain regions that mediate mood and
antagonist NAN-190 abolished the anti-immobility effect elicited by motivation (Papakostas, 2006). Furthermore, the neuroimaging
the extract of R. officinalis in the TST, suggesting the involvement of 5- findings support the hypothesis that major depression is associated
HT1A receptors in the antidepressant-like effect of this plant. with a state of reduced dopaminergic transmission, possibly reflected
Preclinical and clinical studies have reported a key role for 5-HT2 by a compensatory up-regulation of D2 receptors. A deficiency of
receptors in the pathophysiology of depression as well as the action mesolimbic dopamine is a leading candidate for the etiology of certain
of many antidepressants (Boothman et al., 2006; Cryan and Lucki, symptoms of depression (e.g., anhedonia and loss of motivation)
2000; Wang et al., 2008). Moreover, many established antidepres- (Dunlop and Nemeroff, 2007). In our study, the selective dopamine D1
sants are effective 5-HT2 receptor antagonists (Deakin, 1988). receptor antagonist SCH23390 and the dopamine D2 receptor
However, the preferential 5-HT2A receptor partial agonist DOI was antagonist, sulpiride, were able to reverse the antidepressant-like
reported to enhance the antidepressant-like effect of some com- effect of the extract of R. officinalis. These results are in accordance
pounds (Khisti and Chopde, 2000; Zomkowski et al., 2004). In our with literature data indicating that both dopamine D1 and D2
study, the pretreatment with ketanserin prevented the anti- receptors might play a role in depression (Basso et al., 2005; Machado
immobility effect of the extract of R. officinalis, which suggests that et al., 2007; Papakostas, 2006; Yamada et al., 2004).
its effect in the TST is mediated through an interaction with 5-HT2A Altogether, our results firstly indicate that the extract of
receptors, since ketanserin has a higher affinity for 5-HT2A receptors R. officinalis causes an antidepressant-like effect that seems to be
than for other 5-HT2 receptor subtypes (Baxter et al., 1995). Data mediated by an interaction with the monoaminergic system. Phyto-
from our group have shown that ketanserin was able to reverse the chemical studies have identified active components in this plant, such
antidepressant-like effects of some compounds and plant extracts, as flavonoids including diosmetin, diosmin, luteolin, apigenin,
such as: agmatine (Zomkowski et al., 2004), S. molle (Machado et al., quercetin and kaempherol; phenols such as caffeic and rosmarinic
2007), folic acid (Brocardo et al., 2008) and magnesium chloride acids and terpenoids like, carnosol, carnosic acid, rosmanol, oleanolic
(Cardoso et al., 2009). and ursolic acids (Altinier et al., 2007; Barnes et al., 2001; Bentayeb
The involvement of 5-HT3 receptors in the pathophysiology of et al., 2007; Frankel et al., 1996; González-Trujano et al., 2007; Newall
depression is less reported in the literature, but some reports have et al., 1998; Wellwood and Cole, 2004). Screening of the ethanol
indicated that different classes of antidepressants act as functional extract of R. officinalis aerial parts has reported the presence of
antagonists at the 5-HT3 receptors, indicating that the suppression of flavonoids, tannins and saponins, but not the presence of alkaloids as
5-HT3 receptor activity may contribute to the action of antidepres- detected in an aqueous extract (Hosseinzadeh and Nourbakhsh,
sants (Eisensamer et al., 2003). The 5-HT3 receptor antagonists 2003). In our study, a preliminary chemical composition of the
administered acutely, decreased the duration of immobility in the FST hydroalcoholic extract by thin layer chromatography, infrared spectro-
(Bravo and Maswood, 2006). While a 5-HT3 receptor agonist scopic method and NMR spectrum revealed the presence of carnosol,
attenuated the decrease in immobility produced by imipramine, carnosic acid and oleanolic acid (data not shown). Further chemical
desipramine and mianserin, 5-HT3 receptor antagonists, potentiated and pharmacological analysis of the extract will be conducted to
antidepressant-like effects of several SSRIs in the FST (Nakagawa et al., isolate and characterize the active principles responsible for the
1998). In the present study, mCPBG, a 5-HT3 receptor agonist, antidepressant-like effect.
attenuated the decreased duration of immobility induced by
R. officinalis, although mCPBG did not affect the duration of immobility 5. Conclusion
when it was given alone. This result suggests that the antidepressant-
like effect of the extract is dependent on a decrease in the 5-HT3 In conclusion, the present study indicates that R. officinalis produces a
receptor activation. It is somewhat in accordance with the study of Kos specific antidepressant-like effect in animal models predictive of
et al. (2006), which has shown that MDL72222, a 5-HT3 receptor antidepressant properties, forced swimming test and tail suspension
antagonist, administered at a higher dose (3 mg/kg, i.p.) than the one test. Moreover, the effect of the acute or repeated administration of this
employed in the work, produced an antidepressant-like effect in the extract was similar to the action produced by the classical antidepressant
TST. Moreover, the hypothesis that the suppression of 5-HT3 receptor fluoxetine. In addition, it was also shown that its antidepressant-like effect
activity contribute to the antidepressant-like effect of the extract of is dependent on its interaction with the serotonergic (5-HT1A, 5-HT2A and
R. officinalis was reinforced by the synergistic antidepressant-like 5-HT3 receptors), noradrenergic (α1-receptor) and dopaminergic (D1 and
D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650 649
D2 receptors) systems. Further studies are necessary to elucidate which Haloui M, Louedec L, Michel JB, Lyoussi B. Experimental diuretic effects of Rosmarinus
officinalis and Centaurium erythraea. J Ethnopharmacol 2000;71:465–72.
isolated compounds are responsible for the antidepressant-like effects of Heinrich M, Kufer J, Leonti M, Pardo-de-Santayana M. Ethnobotany and ethnopharma-
the extract of R. officinalis. cology – interdisciplinary links with the historical sciences. J Ethnopharmacol
2006;107:157–60.
Hensler JG. Differential regulation of 5-HT1A receptors – G protein interactions in brain
Acknowledgements following chronic antidepressant administration. Neuropsychopharmacology
2002;26:565–73.
The present study was supported by a grant from FAPESC/SC, CNPq Holsboer F. Therapeutics for anxiety and depression disorders. Drug Disc Today
2004;1:105–9.
and CAPES (Brazil), and the FINEP research grant “Rede Instituto Brasileiro Hosseinzadeh H, Nourbakhsh M. Effect of Rosmarinus officinalis aerial parts extract on
de Neurociência (IBN-Net)” # 01.06.0842-00. We thank Dr. Daniel B. morphine withdrawal syndrome in mice. Phytotherapy Res 2003;17:938–41.
Falkenberg for identifying the specie of Rosmarinus officinalis and Dra. Inês Kaster MP, Santos ARS, Rodrigues ALS. Involvement of 5-HT1A receptors in the
antidepressant-like effect of adenosine in the mouse forced swimming test. Brain
M. Brighente for giving suggestions in the beginning of the study.
Res Bull 2005;67:53–61.
Khisti RT, Chopde CT. Serotonergic agents modulate antidepressant-like effect of the
References neurosteroid 3alpha-hydroxy-5alpha-pregnan-20-one in mice. Brain Res
2000;865:291–300.
Altinier G, Sosa S, Aquino RP, Mencherini T, Loggia RD, Tubaro A. Characterization of Kim JH, Kim SY, Lee SY, Jang CG. Antidepressant-like effects of Albizzia julibrissin in mice:
topical antiinflammatory compounds in Rosmarinus officinalis L. J Agric Food Chem involvement of the 5-HT1A receptor system. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 2007;87:41–7.
2007;55:1718–23. Kos T, Popik P, Pietraszek M, Schäfer D, Danysz W, Dravolina O, et al. Effect of 5-HT3
Bai F, Li X, Clay M, Lindstrom T, Skolnick P. Intra and interstrain differences in models of receptor antagonist MDL 72222 on behaviors induced by ketamine in rats and mice.
“behavioral despair”. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 2001;70:187–92. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol 2006;16:297–310.
Bakirel T, Bakirel U, Keles OU, Ülgen SG, Yardibi H. In vivo assessment of antidiabetic and Leitch MM, Ingram CD, Young AH, McQuade R, Gartside SE. Flattening the corticosterone
antioxidant activities of rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) in alloxan-diabetic rhythm attenuates 5-HT1A autoreceptor function in the rat: relevance for depression.
rabbits. J Ethnopharmacol 2008;116:64–73. Neuropsychopharmacology 2003;28:119–25.
Barnes J, Anderson L, Phillipson D. Herbal Medicines. 1st ed. Great Britain: Machado DG, Kaster MP, Binfaré RW, Dias M, Santos ARS, Pizzolatti MG, et al.
Pharmaceutical Press; 2001. Antidepressant-like effect of the extract from leaves of Schinus molle L. in mice:
Basso AM, Gallagher KB, Bratcher NA, Brioni JD, Moreland RB, Hsieh GC, et al. evidence for the involvement of the monoaminergic system. Progress Neuro-
Antidepressant-like effect of D(2/3) receptor, but not D(4) receptor-activation in the Psychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2007;31:421–8.
rat forced swim test. Neuropsychopharmacology 2005;30:1257–68. Mayorga AJ, Dalvi A, Page ME, Zimov-Levinson S, Hen R, Lucki I. Antidepressant-like
Baxter G, Kennett GA, Blaney F, Blackburn T. 5-HT2 receptor subtypes: a family re- behavioral effects in 5-hydroxytryptamine1A and 5-hydroxytryptamine1B receptor
united? Trends Pharmacol Sci 1995;16:105–10. mutant mice. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 2001;298:1101–7.
Bentayeb K, Rubio C, Batlle R, Nerín C. Direct determination of carnosic acid in a new active McGarry H, Pirotta M, Hegarty K, Gunn J. General practitioners and St. John's Wort: a
packaging based on natural extract of rosemary. Anal Bioanal Chem 2007;389:1989–96. question of regulation or knowledge? Complement Ther Med 2007;15:142–8.
Bilia AR, Gallori S, Vincieri FF. St. John's wort and depression. Efficacy, safety and Müller WE. Current St. John's wort research from mode of action to clinical efficacy.
tolerability – an update. Life Sci 2002;70:3077–96. Pharmacol Res 2003;47:101–9.
Boothman LJ, Mitchell SN, Sharp T. Investigation of the SSRI augmentation properties of 5-HT2 Nakagawa Y, Ishima T, Takashima T. The 5-HT3 receptor agonist attenuates the action of
receptor antagonists using in vivo, microdialysis. Neuropharmacology 2006;50:726–32. antidepressants in the forced swim test in rats. Brain Res 1998;786:189–93.
Bravo G, Maswood S. Acute treatment with 5-HT3 receptor antagonist, tropisetron, Nathan PJ. Hypericum perforatum (St John's Wort): a non-selective reuptake inhibitor? A
reduces immobility in intact female rats exposed to the forced swim test. review of the recent advances in its pharmacology. J Psychopharmacol 2001;15:47–54.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 2006;85:362–8. Nestler EJ, Barrot M, Dileone RJ, Eisch AJ, Gold SJ, Monteggia LM. Neurobiology of
Brocardo PS, Budni J, Kaster MP, Santos ARS, Rodrigues ALS. Folic acid administration depression. Neuron 2002;34:13–25.
produces an antidepressant-like effect in mice: evidence for the involvement of the Newall CA, Anderson LA, Philipson JD. Herbal medicines. A guide for health-care
serotonergic and noradrenergic systems. Neuropharmacology 2008;54:464–73. professionals. London: Pharmaceutical; 1998.
Cardoso CC, Lobato KR, Binfaré RW, Ferreira PK, Rosa AO, Santos ARS, et al. Evidence for O'Leary OF, Bechtholt AJ, Crowley JJ, Hill TE, Page ME, Lucki I. Depletion of serotonin and
the involvement of the monoaminergic system in the antidepressant-like effect of catecholamines block the acute behavioral response to different classes of antidepressant
magnesium. Progress Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2009;33:235–42. drugs in the mouse tail suspension test. Psychopharmacology 2007;192:357–71.
Chen Z, Skolnick P. Triple uptake inhibitors: therapeutic potential in depression and O'Neill MF, Conway MW. Role of 5-HT1A and 5-HT1B receptors in the mediation of behavior in
beyond. Expert Opin Investig Drugs 2007;16:1365–77. the forced swim test in mice. Neuropsychopharmacology 2001;24:391–8.
Coppen A. The biochemistry of affective disorders. Br J Psychiatry 1967;113:1237–64. Páez-Pereda M. New drug targets in the signaling pathways activated by antidepres-
Cryan JF, Lucki I. Antidepressant-like behavior effects mediated by 5-hydroxytrypta- sants. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2005;29:1010–6.
mine (2C) receptors. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 2000;295:1120–6. Papakostas GI. Dopaminergic-based pharmacotherapies for depression. Eur Neuropsy-
Cryan JF, Markou A, Lucki I. Assessing antidepressant activity in rodents: recent chopharmacol 2006;16:391–402.
developments and future needs. Trends Pharmacol Sci 2002;23:238–45. Peng WH, Lo KL, Lee YH, Hung TH, Lin YC. Berberine produces antidepressant-like effects in
Cryan JF, Mombereau C, Vassout A. The tail suspension test as a model for assessing the forced swim test and in the tail suspension test in mice. Life Sci 2007;81:933–8.
antidepressant activity: review of pharmacological and genetic studies in mice. Porsolt RD, Bertin A, Jalfre M. Behavioral despair in mice: a primary screening test for
Neurosci Biobehav Rev 2005;29:571–625. antidepressants. Arch Int Pharmacodyn Ther 1977;229:327–36.
Cunha MP, Machado DG, Bettio LEB, Capra JC, Rodrigues ALS. Interaction of zinc with Randrup A, Munkvad I, Fog R, Gerlach J, Molander L, Kjellberg B, et al. Mania, depression
antidepressants in the tail suspension test. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol and brain dopamine. Curr Dev Psychopharmacol 1975;2:205–48.
Psychiatry 2008;32:1913–20. Redrobe JP, Bourin M. Partial role of 5-HT2 and 5-HT3 receptors in the activity of
Deakin JF. 5HT2 receptors, depression and anxiety. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1988;29:819–20. antidepressants in the mouse forced swimming test. Eur J Pharmacol 1997;325:129–35.
Del Campo J, Amiot MJ, Nguyen-The C. Antimicrobial effect of rosemary extracts. J Food Redrobe JP, Bourin M, Colombel MC, Baker GB. Dose-dependent noradrenergic and
Production 2000;63:1359–68. serotonergic properties of venlafaxine in animal models indicative of antidepres-
Dias PC, Foglio MA, Possenti A, Carvalho JE. Antiulcerogenic activity of crude hydroalcoholic sant activity. Psychopharmacology 1998a;138:1–8.
extract of Rosmarinus officinalis L. J Ethnopharmacol 2000;69:57–62. Redrobe JP, Bourin M, Colombel MC, Baker GB. Psychopharmacological profile of the
Drevets WC, Frank E, Price JC, Kupfer DJ, Holt D, Greer PJ, et al. PET imaging of serotonin selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, paroxetine: implication of noradrenergic and
1A receptor binding in depression. Biol Psychiatry 1999;46:1375–87. serotonergic mechanisms. J Psychopharmacol 1998b;12:348–55.
Dunlop BW, Nemeroff CB. The role of dopamine in the pathophysiology of depression. Renard CE, Fiocco AJ, Clenet F, Hascoet M, Bourin M. Is dopamine implicated in the
Arch Gen Psychiatry 2007;64:327–37. antidepressant-like effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in the mouse
Eckeli AL, Dach F, Rodrigues ALS. Acute treatment with GMP produce antidepressant- forced swimming test? Psychopharmacology 2001;159:42–50.
like effects in mice. NeuroReport 2000;11:1839–43. Rodrigues ALS, Rocha JBT, Mello CF, Souza DO. Effect of perinatal lead exposure on rat
Eisensamer B, Rammes G, Gimpl G, Shapa M, Ferrari U, Hapfelmeier G, et al. behavior in open-field and two-way avoidance tasks. Pharmacol Toxicol 1996;79:150–6.
Antidepressants are functional antagonists at the serotonin type 3 (5-HT3) receptor. Rodrigues ALS, Silva GL, Matteussi AS, Fernandes E, Miguel O, Yunes RA, et al. Involvement of
Mol Psychiatry 2003;12:994-1007. monoaminergic system in the antidepressant-like effect of the hydroalcoholic extract of
Elhwuegi AS. Central monoamines and their role in major depression. Prog Siphocampylus verticillatus. Life Sci 2002;70:1347–58.
Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2004;28:435–51. Rodríguez-Landa JF, Contreras CM. A review of clinical and experimental observations
Felipe FCB, Filho JTS, Souza LEO, Silveira JA, Uchoa DEA, Silveira ER, et al. Piplartine, an about antidepressant actions and side effects produced by Hypericum perforatum
amide alkaloid from Piper tuberculatum, presents anxiolytic and antidepressant extracts. Phytomedicine 2003;10:688–99.
effects in mice. Phytomedicine 2007;14:605–12. Sakakibara H, Ishida K, Grundmann O, Nakajima JI, Seo S Butterweck V, Minami Y, et al.
Frankel EN, Huang SW, Aeschbach R, Prior E. Antioxidant activity of a rosemary extract Antidepressant effect of extracts from Ginkgo biloba leaves in behavioral models.
and its constituents, carnosic acid, carnosol, and rosmarinic acid, in bulk oil and oil- Biol Pharm Bull 2006;29:1767–70.
in-water emulsion. J Agric Food Chem 1996;44:131–5. Sargent PA, Kjaer KH, Bench CJ, Rabiner EA, Messa C, Meyer J, et al. Brain serotonin 1A
González-Trujano ME, Peña EI, Martínez AL, Moreno J, Guevara-Fefer P, Déciga-Campos M, et receptor binding measured by positron emission tomography with [11C] WAY-
al. Evaluation of the antinociceptive effect of Rosmarinus officinalis L. using three different 100635: effects of depression and antidepressant treatment. Arch Gen Psychiatry
experimental models in rodents. J Ethnopharmacol 2007;111:476–82. 2000;57:174–80.
650 D.G. Machado et al. / Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry 33 (2009) 642–650
Schildkraut JJ, Gordon EK, Durell J. Catecholamine metabolism in affective disorders. I. Wellwood CRL, Cole RA. Relevance of carnosic acid concentrations to the selection of
Normetanephrine and VMA excretion in depressed patients treated with rosemary, Rosmarinus officinalis (L.), accessions for optimization of antioxidant
imipramine. J Psychiatr Res 1965;3:213–28. yield. J Agric Food Chem 2004;52:6101–7.
Sotelo-Félix JI, Martinez-Fong D, Muriel P, Santillán RL, Castillo D, Yahuaca P. Evaluation Yamada J, Sugimoto Y, Yamada S. Involvement of dopamine receptors in the anti-
of the effectiveness of Rosmarinus officinalis (Lamiaceae) in the alleviation of immobility effects of dopamine re-uptake inhibitors in the forced swimming test.
carbon tetrachloride-induced acute hepatotoxicity in the rat. J Ethnopharmacol Eur J Pharmacol 2004;504:207–11.
2002;81:145–54. Yamamoto J, Yamada K, Naemura A, Yamashita T, Arai R. Testing various herbs for
Steru L, Chermat R, Thierry B, Simon P. The tail suspension test: a new method for antithrombotic effect. Nutrition 2005;21:580–7.
screening antidepressants in mice. Psychopharmacology 1985;85:367–70. Zhang Z. Therapeutic effects of herbal extracts and constituents in animal models of
Taylor S, Stein MB. The future of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in psychiatric disorders. Life Sci 2004;75:1659–99.
psychiatric treatment. Med Hypotheses 2005;66:14–21. Zhang YZ, Li YF, Yu NJ, Yuan L, Zhao YM, Xiao WB, et al. Antidepressant-like effects of the
Taylor C, Fricker AD, Devi LA, Gomes I. Mechanisms of action of antidepressants: from ethanolic extract of Xiaobuxin-Tang, a traditional Chinese herbal prescription in
neurotransmitter systems to signaling pathways. Cell Signal 2005;17:549–57. animal models of depression. Chin Med J 2007;120:1792–6.
Thierry B, Steru L, Simon P, Porsolt RD. The tail suspension test: ethical considerations. Zomkowski ADE, Rosa AO, Lin J, Santos ARS, Calixto JB, Rodrigues ALS. Evidence for
Psychopharmacology 1986;90:284–5. serotonin receptor subtypes involvement in agmatine antidepressant-like effect in
Wang R, Xu Y, Wu HL, Li YB, Li YH, Guo JB, et al. The antidepressant effects of curcumin in the mouse forced swimming test. Brain Res 2004;1023:253–63.
the forced swimming test involve 5-HT1 and 5-HT2 receptors. Eur J Pharmacol
2008;578:43–50.
61
CAPÍTULO 2
9 Daniele G. Machado a, Mauricio P. Cunha a, Vivian B. Neis a, Grasiela O. Balen a, André Colla a,
10 Luis E. B. Bettioa, Ágatha Oliveira a, Francis Leonardo Pazini a, Juliana B. Dalmarco b, Edésio Luiz
12
13
14
21
22
23
24 *Corresponding author: Tel.: +55 (48) 3721-5043; FAX +55 (48) 3721-9672
26
27
1
28 Abstract
29
30 The aim of this study was to investigate the antidepressant-like effect of fractions from Rosmarinus
31 officinalis L.: ethyl acetate 1 and 2 (AcOEt1 and 2), hexane (HEX), ethanolic (ET), and essential oil
32 free (EOF) fractions, as well essential oil, the isolated compounds carnosol and betulinic acid in the
33 tail suspension test, a predictive test of depression in mice. All of them produced a significant
34 antidepressant-like effect: AcOEt1, ET, EOF fractions and essential oil (0.1-100 mg/ kg, p.o); HEX
35 (0.1-10 mg/ kg, p.o) and AcOEt2 fraction (0.1-1 mg/ kg, p.o), carnosol (0.01-0.1 mg/ kg, p.o.) and
36 betulinic acid (10 mg/ kg, p.o.). No psychostimulant effect was shown in the open-field test,
37 indicating that the effects in the tail suspension test are specific. This study suggests that carnosol and
38 betulinic acid could be responsible, at least in part, for the anti-immobility effect of extracts from
39 Rosmarinus officinalis.
40
41
42 Keywords: Rosmarinus officinalis; carnosol; betulinic acid; essential oil; tail suspension test;
43 antidepressant.
44
45 Abbreviations: ANOVA, analysis of variance; ethyl acetate 1, AcOEt1; ethyl acetate 2, AcOEt 2;
46 hexane, HEX; ethanolic, ET; essential oil free, EOF; TST, tail suspension test.
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
2
55 1. Introduction
56 Depression is one of the major mental disorders associated with considerable morbidity and
57 mortality, unfortunately with a consistently high prevalence worldwide. The lifetime prevalence of
58 depression has been estimated to be as high as 21% of the general population in some developed
61 selective reversible inhibitors of monoamine oxidase, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and
63 satisfactory, since this conventional treatment modalities are hindered by adverse effects and
64 generally produce only a partial remission (Páez-Pereda, 2005; Richelson, 1994; Taylor & Stein,
65 2005).
67 pharmacotherapy with medicinal plants can offer advantages in terms of safety and tolerability,
68 possibly also improving patient compliance (Richelson, 1994). The search of extracts and isolated
69 compounds of plants has progressed significantly in the past decade (Zhang, 2004) and this fact could
70 be due to, in part, the need to identify new therapeutic alternative for treatment of psychiatric
73 Europe that has been cultivated in many parts of the world, including Brazil (Balmé, 1978; Duke,
74 2000). The leaves of this plant are commonly used as a condiment to season food, and as a source of
75 antioxidant compounds for food conservation (Zeng et al., 2001). The essential oil produced by
76 Rosmarinus officinalis is colourless or pale yellow with the characteristic of rosemary and warm
77 camphoraceous taste. The oil of this plant is used in the perfume industry and as a flavor agent and
78 the majority of its constituents have been reported to be inhibitory to microorganisms (Deans &
79 Svoboda, 1993).
81 of several disorders, as inflammatory diseases, physical and mental fatigue, and treatment of nervous
3
82 agitation and depression, among other applications (Balmé, 1978; Duke, 2000; Heinrich, Kufer,
84 Pharmacological studies carried out with the extract and essential oil from Rosmarinus
85 officinalis show that this plant exerts several biological effects, such as: antioxidant, antidiabetic,
86 antinociceptive and anti-inflammatory, among others applications (Bakirel, Bakirel, Keles, Ülgen &
87 Yardibi, 2008; Benincá, Dalmarco, Pizzolatti & Fröde, 2011; González-Trujano et al., 2007;
88 Mangena & Muyima, 1999; Takaki et al., 2008). We have recently shown that the hydroalcoholic
90 effect in the in forced swimming test (FST) and tail suspension test (TST), predictive tests of
93 Phytochemical studies reported the biologically active compounds in this plant, such as:
94 terpenoids - like carnosol, carnosic acid, rosmanol, oleanolic and ursolic acids; flavonoids including
95 diosmin, luteolin, apigenin and quercetin and phenols as caffeic and rosmarinic acids. Furthermore,
96 these compounds have shown antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and antinociceptive properties in pre-
97 clinical studies (Altinier et al., 2007; Barnes, Anderson & Phillipson, 2001; Benincá, Dalmarco,
98 Pizzolatti & Fröde, 2011; Frankel, Huang, Aeschbach & Prior, 1996; González-Trujano et al., 2007).
100 our group, the ethnopharmacological use this plant for treatment of the depression and that the herbal
101 medicines include a range of pharmacologically active compounds, the aim of this study was to
102 verify the effects of the several fractions and essential oil of this plant in the TST in mice.
103 Additionally, this study isolated and identified the major components of Rosmarinus officinalis, that
105
4
108 Stems and leaves of Rosmarinus officinalis (Labiatae) were collected in Santo Amaro do
109 Imperatriz, Santa Catarina, and identified by Dr. Daniel Falkenberg, from the Department of Botany,
110 Federal University of Santa Catarina. A voucher specimen (Excicata number 34918) was deposited
111 in the Herbarium of the Department of Botany, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Santa Catarina,
112 Brazil. The preparation of crude extract was carried out as described previously Machado et al.
113 (2009). Briefly, dried aerial parts of Rosmarinus officinalis (600 g) was submitted to maceration in
114 ethanol (96%) during fifteen days at room temperature (25±2 °C). Thereafter, the extract was filtered
115 and then concentrated under reduced pressure (at approximately 60°). The maceration was repeated
116 three times. After removing the solvent by liophylization, this procedure gave 61 g of a green solid
118
120 The crude extract (61 g) was subjected to passage on a short silica gel 60 (Vetec – 0.063–0.2
121 mesh) column with hexane, ethyl acetate and ethanol in order of polarity, to give the hexane (HEX:
122 13.3 g, 21.8%), ethyl acetate (AcOEt1:8.83g, 14.5% and AcOEt2:15.48g, 25.3%) and ethanolic (ET:
123 13 g, 21%) fractions. Part of the HEX fraction (9.37 g) was subjected to a chromatographic procedure
124 on a silica gel 60 (Vetec –0.063–0.2 mesh) column using hexane–ethyl acetate solutions with
125 increasing polarity as eluents, to afford 13 fractions. Fractions8–9, which were eluted with hexane–
126 ethyl acetate (75:25, v/v),were purified by crystallization in acetone to give the phenolic diterpene
127 carnosol (CA) (Compound 1) (76 mg, 0.8%).This isolated compound presents as colour less crystals,
128 with a melting point (m.p.) of 215–219 C (Figure 1). Part of the AcOEt fraction (8.83 g) was also
129 submitted to the same silica gel column using hexane-ethyl acetate solutions in increasing order of
130 polarity as eluent, to give 33 fractions. Fractions7–9 were met and eluted with hexane–ethyl acetate
131 (75:25, v/v) and purified by crystallization in ethanol, yielding the triterpene betulinic acid (BA)
132 (Compound 2) (43 mg, 0.48%). BA presented as a white powder, with an m.p. of 296–298 C (Figure
133 1). The structures of the known compounds were identified by spectroscopic data (1 H NMR, 13 C
134 NMR (Varian AS-400 – Palo Alto,CA, USA), and IR – Perkin–Elmer FTIR 16 PC, Beaconsfield,
5
135 England). The results were compared with spectral data obtained from the literature (Mahato &
136 Kundu, 1994; Pukalskas, Van Beek & Waard, 2005), as well as co-thin layer chromatography with
139
141 The liquid chromatography (HPLC) profile was obtained using Varian ProStar 310 equipment
142 with a UV/vis Detector (monitoring 210 nm) (Walnut Creek, CA, USA), a manual injector, and the
143 StarFinder version 5.5 software. The HPLC apparatus was equipped with a ChromSpher 5
144 C18 column (4.6 mm 250 mm i.d.) (Walnut Creek, CA, USA). In the mobile phase the following
145 substances were used: methanol (A), acetonitrile (B) and water (C) with a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min.
146 The following elution profile was used: 0–7.5 min 60:0:40 (A:B:C) (isocratic); 7.5–20 min
147 0:100:0 (linear); 20–25 min 0:100:0 (isocratic). An equilibration period of 10 min was also included
148 between runs. The carnosol used as standard for quantification was obtained according to Benincá,
149 Dalmarco, Pizzolatti & Fröde (2011). The triterpenes betulinic acid, oleanolic acid, ursolic acid and
150 rosmarinic acid (Sigma–Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany) also was used as standard.
151
152 2.4. Distillation of essential oil and preparation of essential oil free fraction
153 Fresh aerial parts (200g) were ground prior to the operation and then ground rosemary was
154 submitted to water distillation for 4 h using a Clevenger apparatus. The distilled essential oil were
155 dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered and stored at 4°C. After removing the essential oil, the
156 leaves were re-extracted with alcohol 96% to obtain the essential oil free fraction (13.2g, 6.6%).
157
159 The quantification of essential oil was performed on a Gas Chromatograph (GC) -Shimadzu
160 14 B with a Flame Ionization Detector (GC-FID), column OV-5 (30 m x 0.25 mm i.d. x 0.25 μm
161 film), N2 as flow gas with constant pressure of 80 kPa. The split ratio was 1/150 and injection volume
6
162 was 0.3 μL of the oil. Injector and detector were held at 250°C and 300°C, respectively. The
163 following program was: 50 oC for 3 min, rate of 5°C min-1 until 270oC and hold for 8 min. The
164 identification of the compounds was performed on a Gas Cromatograph coupled with Spectrometer
165 Mass (GC-MS) Varian£CP 3800-Saturn 2000, Scanning (1 scan s-1) was performed in the range of
166 39– 400 m/z and using electron impact ionization at 70 eV. The column used was CPSil 8CB (30 m x
167 0.25 mm i.d., 0.25 Pm film). Analyses were carried out using helium as carrier gas at a flow rate of
168 1.0 mL min -1 in a split ratio of 1:20 and the following program rate was: 50o C hold for 1 min, rate
169 of 3o C min-1 until 240o C; injector: 250o C. The compounds were identified by using three different
170 analytical methods: (1) Arithmetic indices (AI), (2) GC–MS retention indices (authentic chemicals),
171 and (3) mass spectra (authentic chemicals and NIST98 spectral library collection). The Sigma
172 retention index standard (Sigma Aldrich, USA), used in this study, consisted of a mixture of aliphatic
173 hydrocarbons ranging from C10 through C30, dissolved in hexane. It is designed to be used to obtain
174 Kovats or Arithmetic-type gas chromatographic retention indices, which are useful for preliminary
175 identification of unknown compounds. In this study the arithmetic retention index value is calculated
176 for a peak by comparing its retention characteristics to those of the two closest eluting aliphatic
177 hydrocarbons from the retention index standard, analyzed under identical conditions. Presumptive
178 identifications can often be made by comparing the Arithmetic retention index value to a value
180
182 Male Swiss mice (60 to 70 days old weighing 45-50 g) were maintained at constant
183 room temperature (21±1°C) with free access to water and food, under a 12:12 h light:dark cycle
184 (lights on at 07:00 h). Mice were allowed to acclimatize to the holding room for 24 h before the
185 behavioral procedure. Animals were randomly distributed into specified experimental groups. All
186 experiments were carried out between 9:00 and 16:00 h, with each animal used only once (N=6-9
187 animals per group). The procedures in this study were performed in accordance with the National
7
188 Institute of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and approved by the Ethics
189 Committee of the Institution. All efforts were made to minimize animals suffering and to reduce the
191
193 The fractions: hexane (HEX), ethyl acetate (AcOEt), ethanolic (ET), and essential oil free
194 fraction (EOF) of Rosmarinus officinalis (0.1-100 mg/kg, p.o.) were administered acutely by oral
195 route (p.o.) 60 min before the TST or open- field test. To address some of the compounds isolated
196 from the extract of Rosmarinus officinalis as possible active principles responsible for the
197 antidepressant-like effect or that causes antidepressant-like action in the TST, animals were treated
198 with: carnosol (0.01-10 mg/kg, p.o.) and betulinic acid (0.1-10 mg/kg, p.o.), which were dissolved in
199 distillated water with 10 % Tween 80 and administered acutely by oral route (p.o.), 60 min before the
200 TST or open- field test. In another set of experiments, the essential oil was dissolved in mineral oil
201 and administered acutely by oral route (p.o.) 60 min before the TST or open- field test. The
202 dissolution of the fractions, isolated compounds and essential oil was freshly done immediately
203 before its administration by gavage. A control group received appropriate vehicles (distillated water
204 or mineral oil). . Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) from Sigma Chemical Company, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
205 was used as antidepressant classical and positive control. Drugs were dissolved in distillated water
206 with 10% Tween 80, except ethanolic fraction (ET) that was diluted in saline with 10% ethanol. All
207 fractions and compounds were administered by gavage, in a constant volume of 10 ml/kg body
208 weight.
209
212 The total duration of immobility induced by tail suspension was measured according to the
213 method described by Steru, Chermat, Thierry & Simon (1985). Briefly, mice both acoustically and
8
214 visually isolated were suspended 50 cm above the floor by adhesive tape placed approximately 1 cm
215 from the tip of the tail. Immobility time was registered during a 6 min period (Machado et al., 2009).
216
218 To assess the possible effects of the fractions, isolated compounds and essential oil of
219 Rosmarinus officinalis on locomotor activity mice was evaluated in the open- field paradigm as
220 previously described (Machado et al., 2009). Mice were individually placed in a wooden box
221 (40×60×50 cm) with the floor divided into 12 squares. Number of crossings (number of squares
222 crossed by the animal with the four paws) was used to evaluate locomotor activity (Machado et al.,
224
226 Comparisons between experimental and control groups were performed by one-way-
227 ANOVA, (dose–response curves) followed by Tukey’s HSD post hoc test when appropriate. A
229
230 3. Results
231 Several fractions, essential oil and isolated compounds were submitted to a biological and
234
235 3.1. Phytochemical analysis and High- performance liquid chromatographic profile (HPLC)
236 The spectroscopic data of carnosol and betulinic acid used in this experiment was previously
237 reported by Benincá, Dalmarco, Pizzolatti & Fröde (2011). Calibration curves of were prepared by
238 analysis of calibration solutions of investigated compounds in the concentration range from 0.01 to
239 1.5 mg mL–1. Five calibration solutions were injected in triplicate. Curves were constructed by linear
240 regression of the peak-area ratios (y) of each analyte, versus concentrations (x). The r2 values were
9
241 in the range from 0.990 to 0.999 which confirmed the linearity of the method. The correlation
242 coefficients (r2) and their regression equations of calibration curves for silylated investigated
243 compounds were: rosmarinic acid (0.9900; y=2E+07x -12203), carnosol (0.9980; y=2E+07 +33239);
244 betulinic acid (0.9990; y= 2E+06 + 20006), oleanolic acid (0.9980; y= 3E+06 + 19108) and ursolic
245 shown in Table 1. The compounds quantified were: carnosol, ursolic acid, oleanolic acid, betulinic
246 acid and rosmarinic acid. In this context, as observed in Table 1, carnosol is as major compound in
247 the Acoet 1 (37.06%), EOF (12.80%) and HEX (5.85%) fractions. However, ursolic acid is more
248 pronounced in the Acoet 2 (48.32%) and ETOH (18.48%) fractions. Although present at a lower
249 concentration, the triterpene betulinic acid was found mainly in Acoet 2 (10.18%), ETOH (3.06%)
250 and EOF (2.14%) fractions. The phenolic acid rosmarinic acid was found mainly in the EOF (4.74%)
253
255 Eleven compounds representing 86.97% of the total oil was identified (Table 2). The main volatiles
256 are 1,8-cineole (45.1%), camphor (21.75%), α-pinene (4.62%), borneol (4.77%), α-terpineole
257 (4.57%).
259
261 3.3.1. Effect of acute treatment with the fractions of Rosmarinus officinalis on the immobility time
263 The effects of the oral administration of the all fractions of Rosmarinus officinalis on the
264 immobility time in the TST were shown in Table 3. The AcOEt 1 fraction of Rosmarinus officinalis,
265 by oral route at 0.1, 1, 10, 100 mg/kg decreased the immobility time in the TST as compared to the
266 control group. The one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of this fraction [F(4,42)=6.29,
267 P<0.01] in the TST. However, the AcOEt1 fraction did not cause any change in the locomotor
10
268 activity of mice as compared to control group, as shown by one-way ANOVA [F(4,26) = 0.26, P=
269 0.90].
271 The AcOEt 2 fraction of Rosmarinus officinalis, given by oral route at the dose of 0.1 and 1
272 mg/kg decreased the immobility time in the TST, as compared to the control group. The one-way
273 ANOVA revealed a significant effect of the AcOEt 2 fraction in TST [F(4,35)= 23.19, P<0.01]. The
274 oral administration of the AcOEt 2 fraction caused a decreased number of crossings (0.1 mg/kg) in
275 the open-field test, as can be observed in Table 3. The one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect
276 of this treatment in the locomotor activity: [F(4,32)= 2.81, P<0.05] of mice in open-field test as
278 The HEX fraction of Rosmarinus officinalis, administered by oral route at 0.1, 1 and 10
279 mg/kg decreased the immobility time in the TST as compared to the control group. The one-way
280 ANOVA revealed a significant effect of HEX fraction [F(4,40)=22.99, P<0.01] in TST.
281 Furthermore, the HEX fraction (100 mg/kg, p.o.) decreased locomotor activity of mice in the open-
282 field test, when compared to control group. The one-way ANOVA showed a significant effect of
284 The results depicted in Table 3 also show that ETOH fraction of Rosmarinus officinalis, by
285 oral route at 0.1, 1, 10 and 100 mg/kg decreased the immobility time in the TST as compared to the
286 control group. The one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of the ETOH fraction
287 [F(4,39)=4.78, P<0.01] in TST. The results show that the acute administration of this fraction did not
288 cause any significant change in the locomotion activity of mice as compared to control group
290
291 3.3.2. Effect of acute treatment with essential oil and essential oil free fraction (EOF) of
292 Rosmarinus officinalis on the immobility time in the TST and locomotor activity in the open-field
293 test
11
294 As can be observed in Table 3, the acute administration by oral route at 0.1, 1, 10 and 100
295 mg/kg of essential oil and of EOF fraction were similarly able to decrease the immobility time in the
296 TST, as compared to the control group. The one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of
297 essential oil [F(4,35)=12.52, P<0.01] and EOF fraction [F(4,39)=6.93, P<0.01] in the TST.
298 Additionally, it was shown that the treatment of the essential oil and EOF fraction did not cause any
299 significant change in the locomotion activity of mice as compared to control group in the open-field
300 test. The one way ANOVA did not show significant effect the treatment which essential oil in the
301 locomotion: [F(4,25)=0.98, P=0.43]. Similarly, the treatment the EOF fraction did not alter the
303
304 3.3.3. Effect of acute treatment with isolated compounds of Rosmarinus officinalis on the
305 immobility time in the TST and locomotor activity in the open-field test
306 The effects of the oral administration of carnosol, a compound isolated from Rosmarinus
307 officinalis, on the immobility time in the TST are shown in Table 3. Carnosol given by oral route at
308 the dose of 0.01 and 0.1mg/kg decreased the immobility time, as compared to the control group. The
309 one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of carnosol in the TST [F(4,36)= 4.59, P<0.01]. The
310 oral administration of carnosol decreased the locomotion activity (10 mg/kg, p.o.) of mice as
312 The results show that betulic acid, another compound isolated from Rosmarinus officinalis,
313 administered by oral route at 10 mg/kg decreased the immobility time in the TST as compared to the
314 control group. The one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of betulic acid [F(3,28)=3.03,
315 P<0.05] in the TST. The results show that the acute administration of this compound did not cause
316 any significant change in the locomotion of mice as compared to control group [F(3.31)=0.52,
317 P=0.66].
318 We also show that the antidepressant fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.), used here as a positive
319 control, produced a significant reduction in the immobility time in the TST (Table 3). The one-way
12
320 ANOVA revealed a main effect of treatment [F(1,15)= 29.25, P<0.01] in the TST, but not in the
322
323 4. Discussion
324 The TST is a behavioral model predictive of antidepressant activity that is sensitive to
325 antidepressants from different pharmacological classes, extracts and isolated compounds of plants
326 (Capra et al., 2010; Cryan, Mombereau & Vassout, 2005; Machado et al., 2009; Steru, Chermat,
328 The present study showed that the all fractions derived from the crude extract of Rosmarinus
329 officinalis demonstrated antidepressant-like effect in TST, as well as carnosol and betulic acid, main
330 compounds isolated and identified from this plant that could be, in part, responsible for its
331 antidepressant activity. Interestingly, the essential oil also demonstrated anti-immobility effect in this
332 predictive test in mice. Noteworthy, the effect of the extract of Rosmarinus officinalis in the TST was
333 similar to the effect produced by the oral administration of fluoxetine, used as a positive control.
334 These results are consistent with the ethnopharmacological use of this plant for the treatment of
335 depression (Balmé, 1978; Duke, 2000; Heinrich, Kufer, Leonti & Pardo-de-Santayana, 2006),
336 reinforcing the previous evidence from our group which demonstrates the potential antidepressant
337 effect of the hydroalcoholic crude extract in this same experimental protocol (Machado et al., 2009).
338 Furthermore, the present study is the first work which demonstrated the antidepressant-like effect of
339 carnosol and betulic acid, as well of the essential oil of Rosmarinus officinalis when administered
341 Important to note, this study provide convincing evidence that the fractions, isolated
342 compounds (carnosol and betulinic acid) and essential oil of Rosmarinus officinalis administered by
343 oral route produces a specific antidepressant-like effect in TST, since the reduction of immobility
344 time elicited by these administrations cannot be attributable to any psychostimulant effect (increased
13
346 In our study, the fractions Acoet 1, ET and EOF fraction, isolated from Rosmarinus officinalis
347 L., showed similar antidepressant-like effect in the range dose of 0.1-100 mg/kg, p.o. (with percent of
348 reduction of 18-34% of immobility time in TST). However, it was also observed a difference in dose
349 range and percent of reduction in the Acoet 2 (0.1-1 mg/kg, p.o.; 27-43%) and HEX (0.1-10 mg/kg,
350 p.o.; 28-45%) fraction in the TST. Thus, these fractions showed an effect at lower concentrations and
351 affording a higher percentage of reduction, as compared with the other fractions tested. Probably, the
352 cause by such distinct biological effects may be linked to the differences in the chemical composition
353 of each fraction. Important to note, the examination of the fractions of this plant using HPLC
354 revealed the presence of carnosol, betulinic acid and ursolic acid, as some of the main compounds.
355 The compounds that predominate in each fraction can be decisive for the antidepressant potential of
356 the fractions. Therefore, carnosol is the major constituent of the Acoet 1, HEX and EOF fraction;
357 whereas ursolic acid is the major compound in the Acoet 2 and ETOH fractions. It should be
358 considered that other compounds were also detected in these fractions such as betulinic acid, found
359 mainly in Acoet 2, ETOH and EOF fractions; rosmarinic acid in the EOF fraction and oleanolic acid
361 The antidepressant-like effect of the acutely administered carnosol (0.01-0.1 mg/kg, p.o.) and
362 betulinic acid (10 mg/kg, p.o.) was observed at low doses in the TST. However, despite the present
363 study indicates that carnosol and betulinic acid may be responsible for the antidepressant action of
364 the fractions from Rosmarinus officinalis, we cannot rule out the participation of other phytochemical
365 compounds in this biological effect. It is worth noting that ursolic acid isolated from Rosmarinus
366 officinalis was also effective in producing an antidepressant-like effect in TST in mice and this action
367 may be due to involvement of the dopaminergic system (Machado et al., submitted). Furthermore,
368 rosmarinic and caffeic acids were shown to produce an antidepressant effect in the FST (Takeda,
370 The present study showed that the essential oil of Rosmarinus officinalis also produced
371 antidepressant-like effect (0.1-100 mg/kg, p.o.) in TST, without altering the locomotion in open-field
372 test. Interestingly, our results are in agreement with a recent study that reported that the essential oil
14
373 of Rosmarinus officinalis produced an antidepressant-like effect in the FST, another test predictive of
374 antidepressant potential, in rats (Seol et al., 2010). The chemical analysis revealed that the essential
375 oil of this plant contained as main compounds: 1,8-cineole (45.14%), camphor (21.75%), borneol
376 (4.77%), α-pinene (4.62%), α-terpineole (4.57%). In general, the essential oil of Rosmarinus
377 officinalis can be classified in three chemotypes, based on a chemical analysis of its predominant
378 compounds, namely, cineoliferum (high content in 1,8-cineole), camphoriferum (camphor >20%) and
379 verbenoniferum (verbenone >15%). Important to note, the chemical analysis is complex and many
380 others chemotypes have been recognized according to the relative abundance of other relevant
381 compounds such as α-pinene and others constituents (Napoli, Curcuruto & Ruberto, 2010).
382 Moreover, the diversity of chemotypes can be explained by the fact that this plant is cultivated in
383 different regions, with a variety of soil conditions and climate that interfere with the phytochemical
384 composition of the essential oil, as well as their chemotype. In present study, considering the high
385 content of 1,8-cineole (45.14%) in the essential oil, it may be characterized as cineoliferum
386 chemoype. It remains to be established if 1,8-cineole is the compound responsible for the
388
389 5. Conclusion
390 This study suggests that the antidepressant potential of several fractions of Rosmarinus
391 officinalis L may be attributed, at least in part, to the presence of carnosol and betulinic acid.
392 Moreover, the essential oil of this plant also produced antidepressant-like effect and its main
393 compound, 1,8-cineole may be involved in this action. However, other compounds could play a role
394 to the antidepressant-like of Rosmarinus officinalis L. and further studies are in progress in order to
395 clarify the bioactive principles responsible for these activities, as well as the mechanisms underlying
396 their action. The present study clearly reinforces the notion that Rosmarinus officinalis has a
397 therapeutical potential as an antidepressant, since the effects of all fractions, isolated compounds and
398 essential oil in the TST is similar to the one produced by the classical antidepressant fluoxetine.
15
399 Considering the widespread use of this plant as a condiment, its antidepressant property may be of
400 pharmacological and nutraceutical interest and should be confirmed in future clinical studies.
401
402 Acknowledgements
403 The present study was supported by a grant from FAPESC/SC, CNPq and CAPES (Brazil), and the
404 FINEP research grant “Rede Instituto Brasileiro de Neurociência (IBN-Net)” # 01.06.0842-00. The
405 triterpenes betulinic acid, oleanolic acid, ursolic acid and rosmarinic acid (Sigma–Aldrich,
406 Steinheim, Germany) was kindly donated by Dr. Gustavo A. Micke from the Federal University of
408
409 References
410 Altinier, G., Sosa, S., Aquino, R.P., Mencherini, T., Della Loggia, R., & Tubaro, A. (2007).
413 Adams, P. R. (2007). Identification of essential oil components by gas chromatography, mass
415 Bakirel, T., Bakirel, U., Keles, O.U., Ülgen, S.G., & Yardibi, H. (2008). In vivo assessment of
418 Barnes, J., Anderson, L., & Phillipson, D. (2001). Herbal Medicines. Gran Bretaña: Pharmaceutical
419 Press.
420 Benincá, J.P., Dalmarco, J.B., Pizzolatti, M.G., & Fröde, T.S. (2011). Analysis of the anti-
421 inflammatory properties of Rosmarinus officinalis L. in mice. Food Chemistry, 124, 468-475.
422 Balmé, F. (1978). Plantas medicinais. (5th. ed.). São Paulo: Hemus.
423 Capra, J.C., Cunha, M.P., Machado, D.G., Zomkowski, A.D., Mendes, B.G., Santos, A.R., Pizzolatti,
424 M.G., & Rodrigues, A.L. (2010). Antidepressant-like effect of scopoletin, a coumarin
16
425 isolated from Polygala sabulosa (Polygalaceae) in mice: Evidence for the involvement of
427 Cryan, J.F., Mombereau, C., & Vassout, A. (2005). The tail suspension test as a model for assessing
428 antidepressant activity: review of pharmacological and genetic studies in mice. Neuroscience
430 Deans, S.G., & Svoboda, K.P. (1993). Culinary and aromatic plants. The Plants man, 11, 176-184.
431 Duke, J.A. (2000). Hand book of medicinal herbs. Florida: CRC Press.
432 Frankel, E.N., Huang, S.W., Aeschbach, R., & Prior, E. (1996). Antioxidant activity of a rosemary
433 extract and its constituents, carnosic acid, carnosol, and rosmarinic acid, in bulk oil and oil-in-
434 water emulsion. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 44, 131-135.
435 González-Trujano, M.E., Peña, E.I., Martínez, A.L., Moreno, J., Guevara-Fefer, P., Déciga-Campos,
436 M., & López-Muñoz, F.J., ( 2007). Evaluation of the antinociceptive effect of Rosmarinus
439 Heinrich, M., Kufer, J., Leonti, M., & Pardo-de-Santayana, M. (2006). Ethnobotany and
442 Machado, D.G., Bettio, L.E., Cunha, M.P., Capra, J.C., Dalmarco, J.B., Pizzolatti, M.G., &
443 Rodrigues, A.L. (2009). Antidepressant-like effect of the extract of Rosmarinus officinalis in
446 Mahato, S. B., & Kundu, A. (1994). 13 C NMR spectra of pentacyclic triterpenoids – A compilation
448 Mangena, T., & Muyima, N.Y. (1999). Comparative evaluation of the antimicrobial activities of
449 essential oils of Artemisia afra, Pteronia incana and Rosmarinus officinalis on selected
450 bacteria and yeast strains. Letters in Applied Microbiology, 28, 291-296.
17
451 Napoli, E.M., Curcuruto, G., & Ruberto, G. (2010). Screening of the essential oil composition of
452 wild Sicilian rosemary. Biochemical Systematics and Ecology, 38, 659-670.
453 Páez-Pereda, M. (2005). New drug targets in the signaling pathways activated by antidepressants.
455 Pukalskas, A., Van Beek, T. A., & Waard, P. (2005). Development of a triple hyphenated HPLC-
458 Richelson, E. (1994). Pharmacology of antidepressants characteristic of the ideal drug. Mayo Clinic
460 Seol, G.H., Shim, H.S., Kim, P.J., Moon, H.K., Lee, K.H., Shim, I., Suh, S.H., & Min, S.S. (2010).
463 Steru, L., Chermat, R., Thierry, B., & Simon, P. (1985). The tail suspension test: a new method for
465 Takaki, I., Bersani-Amado, L. E., Vendruscolo, A., Sartoretto, S. M., Diniz, S. P., Bersani-
466 Amado, C. A., & Cuman, R.K. (2008). Anti-inflammatory and antinociceptive effects of
467 Rosmarinus officinalis L. essential oil in experimental animal models. Journal of Medicinal
469 Takeda, H., Tsuji, M., Inazu, M., Egashira, T., & Matsumiya, T. (2002). Rosmarinic acid and caffeic
470 acid produce antidepressive-like effect in the forced swimming test in mice. European
472 Taylor, S., & Stein, M.B. (2005). The future of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in
474 Wong, Ma-Li., & Licinio, J. (2001). Research and treatment approaches to depression. Nature
18
476 Zeng, H. H., Tu, P. F., Zhou, K., Wang, H., Wang, B. H., & Lu, J. F. (2001). Antioxidant Properties
477 of phenolic diterpenes from Rosmarinus officinalis. Acta Pharmacologica Sinica, 22, 1094-
478 1098.
479 Zhang, Z. (2004). Therapeutic effects of herbal extracts and constituents in animal models of
481
483 Figure 1. Scheme of fractionation and isolation of the compounds and obtention of the essential oil
485
486
487
488
489
19
Table 1
Table 2
Compound RT %REL AI t AI c
Table 3
Table 3. Effect of the acute treatment of mice with fractions, essential oil and isolated compounds of
Rosmarinus officinalis on the immobility time in the tail suspension test and on the number of crossings
The fractions and the isolated compounds were acutely administered by p.o. route at the dose range
indicated in the table. The classical antidepressant fluoxetine was used as a positive control. Each column
represents the mean +S.E. of 6–9 animals. *P<0.05, ** P<0.01 as compared with the vehicle-treated
control group. The percent of reduction of the immobility time in the TST is shown for the groups in
which a significant effect was revealed by ANOVA followed by Tukey’s HSD post hoc test.
Figure 1
Rosmarinus officinalis
Disttilation, 4h
Fresh plant material
Essential oil
(3.7mL) Dried and ground
plant material
(600g)
Hydroalcoholic
crude extract
Essential oil free (EOF) (61g)
Fraction
(13.2g)
Filtration on a column of silica
87
CAPÍTULO 3
1
2 Ursolic acid, a constituent from Rosmarinus officinalis, is a triterpenoid compound which
3
4 has been extensively known for its anticancer and antioxidant properties. In the present study, we
5
6
7 investigated the antidepressant-like effect of ursolic acid isolated from this plant in a predictive
8
9 test of antidepressant property, the tail suspension test (TST). Furthermore, the involvement of
10
11
12 dopaminergic system in its antidepressant-like effect was investigated in this test in mice. Ursolic
13
14 acid at a dose of 0.1 mg/kg, p.o. reduced the immobility time in the TST. The effect of ursolic acid
15
16
17 (0.1 mg/kg, p.o.) in TST was prevented by the pretreatment of mice with SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg,
18
19 s.c., a dopamine D1 receptor antagonist) and sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor
20
21 antagonist). The administration of a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) in
22
23
24 combination with sub-effective doses of SKF38393 (0.1 mg/kg, s.c., a dopamine D1 receptor
25
26 agonist), apomorphine (0.5 Pg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor agonist) or bupropion (1 mg/kg,
27
28
29 i.p., a dopamine reuptake inhibitor) reduced the immobility time in the TST as compared with
30
31 either drug alone. Ursolic acid and dopaminergic agents alone or in combination did not cause
32
33
34 significant alterations in the locomotor and exploratory activities. These results indicate that the
35
36 antidepressant-like effect of ursolic acid in the TST is likely mediated by an interaction with the
37
38
39 dopaminergic system, through the activation of dopamine D1 and D2 receptors.
40
41
42 Keywords: Antidepressant; Dopaminergic System; Ursolic acid; Tail Suspension Test
43
44
45
46 Abbreviations: ANOVA, analysis of variance; DMSO, dimethylsulfoxide; SCH23390, (R)-(+)-7-
47
48 chloro-8-hydroxy-3-methyl-1-phenyl-2,3,4,5-tetra-hydro-1H-3-benzazepine hydrochloride; SKF
49
50
38393, (1-phenyl-7,8-dihydroxy-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-1H-3-benzazepine) hydrochloride; TST, tail
51
52
53 suspension test.
54
55
56
57
58 2
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
1. Introduction
1
2 Depression is projected to become the second biggest contributor to the global burden of
3
4 disease and disability by the year 2020 (Pitchot et al., 2010). It is a heterogeneous disorder often
5
6
7 manifested with symptoms at the psychological, behavioral and physiological levels. Noteworthy,
8
9 there are high rates of comorbidity of psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders, type 2 diabetes
10
11
12 mellitus, cancer, cardiovascular disease and depression (Evans et al., 2005; Krishnan and Nestler,
13
14 2008).
15
16
17
The treatment of depression with conventional antidepressants (i.e., monoamine oxidase
18
19
20 inhibitors, tricyclics, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and selective noradrenaline reuptake
21
22 inhibitors) has several drawbacks. The heterogeneity of clinical response to antidepressant and
23
24
25 susceptibility to adverse effects are major clinical problems and support the research for new
26
27 therapeutical agents to treat depression (Brunello et al., 2002; MacGillivray et al., 2003; Wong
28
29
30 and Licinio, 2001). Herbal therapies may be effective alternatives in the treatment of depression,
31
32 as include the case of St John's wort (Akhondzadeh and Maleki, 2006; Bilia et al., 2002; Whiskey
33
34
35
et al., 2001) and the search for novel pharmacotherapy from medicinal plants and compounds
36
37 isolated from plant extracts for this psychiatric disorder has progressed significantly (Zhang,
38
39 2004).
40
41
42
43 Aiming at searching new antidepressant agents, our group has studied the antidepressant
44
45 potential of some plant extracts (Freitas et al., 2010; Machado et al., 2007, 2009; Rodrigues et al.,
46
47
48 2002) and bioactive compounds (Capra et al., 2010; Machado et al., 2008). We have recently
49
50 demonstrated that the extract of Rosmarinus officinalis produces an antidepressant-like effect in
51
52
the mouse tail suspension test (TST) by a mechanism dependent on the interaction with the
53
54
55 monoaminergic systems (Machado et al., 2009). One of the main constituent present in
56
57
58 3
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
Rosmarinus officinalis is ursolic acid (3E-hydroxy-urs-12-en-28-oic acid), a pentacyclic
1 triterpenoid compound, that has a broad range of biological effects, such as antioxidant (Tsai and
2
3
4 Yin, 2008), anti-inflammatory (Baricevic et al., 2001; Benincá et al., 2010), anti-tumoral (Yan-xia
5
6 et al., 2010), anti-diabetic (Jang et al., 2009) and neuroprotective (Lu et al., 2007). Noteworthy,
7
8
9
ursolic acid was shown to be able to protect PC12 cells against the dopaminergic neurotoxin MPP+
10
11 (Tsai and Yin, 2008).
12
13
14 Several studies have indicated that the dopaminergic system plays a significant role in the
15
16
17 pathophysiology of depression and on the mechanisms of action of some current prescribed
18
19 antidepressant agents, mainly bupropion (D’Aquila et al., 2000; Dunlop and Nemeroff, 2007;
20
21
22 Papakostas, 2006). The investigation of novel antidepressant agents that act on this system is
23
24 justified to improve outcomes for patients with treatment-resistant and non remitting depression
25
26
27
(Dunlop and Nemeroff, 2007). Therefore, this study aims, firstly, to examine the antidepressant-
28
29 like action of ursolic acid isolated from Rosmarinus officinalis in the mouse TST, and secondly, to
30
31 investigate by the use of pharmacological procedures the possible participation of the
32
33
34 dopaminergic system in its antidepressant-like action.
35
36
37 2. Methods
38
39
40
2.1. Isolation of ursolic acid from Rosmarinus officinalis
41
42
43
44 Stems and leaves of Rosmarinus officinalis (Labiatae) were collected in Santo Amaro do
45
46 Imperatriz, Santa Catarina, and identified by Dr. Daniel Falkenberg, from the Department of
47
48
49 Botany, Federal University of Santa Catarina. A voucher specimen (Excicata number 34918) was
50
51 deposited in the Herbarium of the Department of Botany, Federal University of Santa Catarina,
52
53
54
Santa Catarina, Brazil. The procedure to obtain the crude extract from Rosmarinus officinalis was
55
56 described previously (Machado et al, 2009). The crude extract was subjected to passage on a short
57
58 4
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
silica gel 60 (Vetec -63-230 mesh) column with hexane, ethyl acetate and ethanol in order of
1 polarity, to give three fractions: the hexane (HEX), ethyl acetate (AcOEt) and ethanolic (EtOH).
2
3
4
Part of the AcOEt fraction (8.83 g) was submitted to the silica gel column eluted with hexane-
5
6 ethyl acetate gradient in increasing polarity, to give 33 fractions. Fractions 20-33 eluted with
7
8 hexane-acetone solution (8:2 v/v) were met and purified by flash chromatography (silica gel 60
9
10
11 column; Vetec- 230-400 mesh) with isocratic elution (Hexane:Acetone 4:1 v/v) to give ursolic
12
13 acid (87 mg).
14
15
16
17 2.2. Animals
18
19
20 Male Swiss mice (40-50 g) were maintained at constant room temperature (21±1°C) with
21
22 free access to water and food, under a 12:12 h light:dark cycle (lights on at 07:00 h). Mice were
23
24
25 allowed to acclimatize to the holding room for 24 h before the behavioral procedure. The animals
26
27 were randomly distributed into specified experimental groups. All experiments were carried out
28
29
30 between 11:00 and 17:00 h, with each animal used only once (N=7-10 animals per group). All
31
32 procedures were performed in accordance with the National Institute of Health Guide for the Care
33
34
35
and Use of Laboratory Animals and approved by the Ethics Committee of the Institution. All
36
37 efforts were made to minimize animals suffering and to reduce the number of animals used in the
38
39 experiments.
40
41
42
43 2.3. Drugs and treatment
44
45
46 The following drugs were used: (R)-(+)-7-chloro-8-hydroxy-3-methyl-1-phenyl-2,3,4,5-
47
48
tetrahydro-1H-3-benzazepine hydrochloride (SCH23390), sulpiride, apomorphine, 1-phenyl-7,8-
49
50
51 dihydroxy-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-1H-3-benzazepine hydrochloride (SKF38393) and bupropion (all
52
53 from Sigma Chemical Company, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.). All drugs were administered by
54
55
56 intraperitoneal (i.p) route, except SCH23390 and SKF38393 that were administered by
57
58 5
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
subcutaneous (s.c.) route. All drugs were administered in a constant volume of 10 ml/kg body
1 weight. Drugs were dissolved in saline, except bupropion that were diluted in distilled water and
2
3
4
sulpiride that was diluted in saline with 5% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). Control animals received
5
6 appropriate vehicle.
7
8
9 Ursolic acid (0.001-10 mg/kg) was dissolved in distilled water with 10% Tween 80 and
10
11
12 administered acutely by oral route (p.o.). The solution of ursolic acid was freshly done from the
13
14 liophylized power immediately before its administration by gavage. A control group received
15
16
17 distilled water with 10% Tween 80 as vehicle.
18
19
20 2.4. Experimental design
21
22
23 In order to investigate the antidepressant-like effect produced by an oral administration of
24
25
26 ursolic acid, it was administered at the dose range 0.001-10 mg/kg (p.o.), 60 min before the TST
27
28 or open-field test.
29
30
31 In order to investigate the involvement of the dopaminergic system in the antidepressant-
32
33
34 like action of ursolic acid in the TST, the following experimental protocols were performed:
35
36
37 Firstly, mice were pretreated with vehicle (control group), SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c., a
38
39
40 dopamine D1 receptor antagonist) or sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor antagonist)
41
42 (Capra et al., 2010; Machado et al., 2007) and 30 min later they received vehicle or ursolic acid
43
44
(0.1 mg/kg, p.o.). A further 60 min was allowed to elapse before the animals were tested in the
45
46
47 TST or open-field test.
48
49
50 In a second experimental approach, we studied the possible synergistic antidepressant-like
51
52
53 effect elicited by the administration of a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid (0.001 mg/ kg, p.o.)
54
55 with sub-effective doses of SKF38393 (0.1 mg/kg, s.c., a dopamine D1 receptor agonist) or
56
57
58 6
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
apomorphine (0.5 Pg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor agonist). Ursolic acid or vehicle were
1 administered 30 min before the administration of the dopamine receptor agonists. In another set of
2
3
4 experiments, a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) was administered
5
6 immediately before the administration of a sub-effective dose of bupropion (1 mg/kg, p.o., a
7
8
9
dopamine reuptake inhibitor). A further 60 min was allowed to elapse before the animals were
10
11 tested in the TST or open-field test.
12
13
14 All the experimental protocols and drug doses utilized in the present study were previously
15
16
17 evaluated in the TST by our group (Binfaré et al., 2009; Capra et al., 2010; Cunha et al., 2008;
18
19 Machado et al., 2007, 2009; Rodrigues et al., 2002).
20
21
22
23
2.5. Behavioral tests
24
25
26 2.5.1. Tail suspension test (TST)
27
28
29 The TST has become one of the most widely used tests for assessing antidepressant-like
30
31
32 activity in mice. It is based on the fact that animals subjected to the short-term inescapable stress
33
34 of being suspended by their tail, will develop an immobile posture. The total duration of
35
36 immobility induced by tail suspension was measured according to the method described by Steru
37
38
39 et al. (1985). Briefly, mice both acoustically and visually isolated were suspended 50 cm above the
40
41 floor by adhesive tape placed approximately 1 cm from the tip of the tail. Immobility time was
42
43
44 recorded during a 6 min period. Mice were considered immobile only when they hung passively
45
46 and completely motionless. Antidepressant treatments reduce the time of immobility and increase
47
48
49 active escape behaviors displayed during inescapable situation the in the TST (Cryan et al., 2005).
50
51 The immobility time was recorded by an observer blind to the drug treatment.
52
53
54 2.5.2. Open-field test
55
56
57
58 7
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
To assess the possible effects of ursolic acid and the other drugs used in the present study
1 on locomotor and exploratory activities, an independent group of mice was evaluated in the open-
2
3
4
field paradigm as previously described (Machado et al., 2007; Rodrigues et al., 1996). Mice were
5
6 individually placed in a wooden box (40×60×50 cm) with the floor divided into 12 equal
7
8 rectangles. The number of crossings defined as the rectangles crossed by the animal with its four
9
10
11 paws and the number of rearings defined as the animal standing upright on its hind legs were
12
13 registered during a period of 6 min. The number of crossings was considered as indicative of
14
15
16 locomotor activity and number of rearings was an indicative of exploratory behavior (Felipe et al.,
17
18 2007; Rodrigues et al., 1996). Crossings and rearings were recorded by an observer blind to the
19
20
21 drug treatment. The floor of the open-field apparatus was cleaned with 10% ethanol between tests
22
23 to remove any olfactory cues.
24
25
26 2.6. Statistical analysis
27
28
29
30 Comparisons between experimental and control groups were performed by analysis of
31
32 variance (ANOVA) followed by Tukey HSD test when appropriate. A value of P < 0.05 was
33
34
35
considered to be significant.
36
37
38 3. Results
39
40
41 3.1. Effects of acute treatment with ursolic acid on the immobility time in the TST and on
42
43
44 the locomotor and exploratory activities in the open-field test
45
46
47 The effects of the oral administration of ursolic acid on the immobility time in the TST are
48
49 shown in Fig. 1A. Ursolic acid given by oral route at the dose of 0.01 and 0.1mg/kg decreased the
50
51
52 immobility time, as compared to the control group (Fig. 1A). The percent of reduction in the
53
54 immobility time was 19.4% and 27.1%, respectively. The one-way ANOVA revealed a significant
55
56
57 effect of ursolic acid in tail suspension test [F(5,41)= 4.32, P<0.01]. The effects of the oral
58 8
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
administration of ursolic acid (dose range 0.001-10 mg/kg, p.o.) in the open-field test are shown in
1 Table 1. As shown in Table 1, the acute administration this compound did not cause any
2
3
4
significant change in the locomotor activity of mice as compared to control group [F(5,43)=2.11,
5
6 P=0.08]. Similarly, the results depicted in Table 1 show that ursolic acid (dose range 0.001-10
7
8 mg/kg, p.o.) did not significantly alter the number of rearings in the open-field test as compared to
9
10
11 the control group [F(5,43)=1.10, P=0.37].
12
13
14 [Figure 1 and Table 1 near here]
15
16
17
3.2. Investigation of the dopaminergic mechanisms underlying the antidepressant-like effect
18
19
20 of ursolic acid in the TST
21
22
23 The results shown in Fig 2A indicate that the pretreatment of mice with SCH23390
24
25
26 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c.) prevented the antidepressant-like effect elicited by ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg,
27
28 p.o.) in the TST. A two-way ANOVA showed significant differences for SCH23390 pretreatment
29
30
31
[F(1, 30)=30.42, P<0.01], ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 30)=14.79, P<0.01] and SCH23390
32
33 pretreatment X ursolic acid treatment interaction [F(1, 30)=18.08, P<0.01]. Moreover, Fig 2B
34
35 illustrates that the pretreatment with sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p.) also prevented the antidepressant-
36
37
38 like effect of ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg, p.o.) in the TST. A two-way ANOVA revealed significant
39
40 differences for sulpiride pretreatment [F(1, 29)=41.19, P<0.01], ursolic acid treatment [F(1,
41
42
43 29)=11.42, P<0.01] and sulpiride pretreatment X ursolic acid treatment interaction [F(1,
44
45 29)=30.57, P<0.01].
46
47
48
Table 2 shows that ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg, p.o.) administered alone or in combination with
49
50
51 SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c.) did not significantly cause changes in the locomotor activity of mice
52
53 in the open-field test. The two-way ANOVA showed no significant effects of SCH23390
54
55
56 pretreatment [F(1,30)=0.71, P=0.40], ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 30)=1.35, P=0.25] and
57
58 9
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
SCH23390 pretreatment X ursolic acid interaction [F(1, 30)=0.96, P=0.33]. Similarly,
1 administration of ursolic acid alone or in combination with SCH23390 did not cause any change
2
3
4
in the rearing responses. The two-way ANOVA showed no significant effects of SCH23390
5
6 pretreatment [F(1,30)=0.01, P=0.92], ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 30)=1.94, P=0.17] and
7
8 SCH23390 pretreatment X ursolic acid interaction [F(1, 30)=1.32, P=0.26].
9
10
11
12 Sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p.) alone or in combination with ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg, p.o.) did
13
14 not cause any significant alteration in the number of crossings and rearings in the open-field.
15
16
17 Regarding crossing responses, two-way ANOVA showed no significant effects of sulpiride
18
19 pretreatment [F(1, 29)=0.03, P=0.85], ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 29)=0.54, P=0.46] and sulpiride
20
21 pretreatment X ursolic acid interaction [F(1, 29)=0.32, P=0.57]. Concerning rearings responses,
22
23
24 two-way ANOVA showed no significant effects of sulpiride pretreatment [F(1, 29)=0.007,
25
26 P=0.93], ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 29)=0.94, P=0.33] and sulpiride pretreatment X ursolic acid
27
28
29 interaction [F(1, 29)=0.54, P=0.46].
30
31
32 [Figure 2 and Table 2 near here]
33
34
35 Additionally, in order to reinforce the notion that the antidepressant-like effect of ursolic
36
37
38 acid in the TST is dependent on the activation of dopamine D1 and D2 receptors, in another set of
39
40 experiments we investigated the effect of the administration of a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid
41
42
43 (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) in combination with sub-effective doses of the dopamine D1 receptor agonist
44
45 SKF38393, the dopamine D2 receptor agonist apomorphine or the antidepressant bupropion on the
46
47
48 immobility time in the TST. As shown in Fig. 3A, a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid (0.001
49
50 mg/kg, p.o.) produced a synergistic antidepressant-like effect with SKF38393 (0.1 mg/kg, s.c.),
51
52
since the combined treatment produced a significant reduction (39.6%) in the immobility time as
53
54
55 compared to the control group. The two-way ANOVA revealed significant differences of ursolic
56
57
58 10
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
acid pretreatment [F(1, 29)=27.87, P<0.01], SKF38393 treatment [F(1, 29)=4.56, P<0.05] and
1 ursolic acid pretreatment X SKF38393 treatment interaction [F(1, 29)=10.60, P<0.01]. The results
2
3
4 showed in Fig 3B indicate that the combined administration of apomorphine (0.5 Pg/kg, i.p.) with
5
6 ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) produced a significant reduction (30.4%) in the immobility time
7
8
9
as compared to the control group. The two-way ANOVA revealed significant differences of
10
11 ursolic acid pretreatment [F(1, 29)=20.83, P<0.01] and ursolic acid pretreatment X apomorphine
12
13 treatment interaction [F(1, 29)=6.94, P<0.01], but not of apomorphine treatment [F(1, 29)=2.48,
14
15
16 P=0.12]. Fig. 3C shows that a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) combined
17
18 with a sub-effective dose of bupropion (1 mg/kg, p.o.) also caused an antidepressant-like effect
19
20
21 (39.4% reduction in the immobility time) in the TST. The two-way ANOVA revealed significant
22
23 differences of ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 30)=16.85, P<0.01], bupropion treatment [F(1,
24
25
26 30)=10.55, P<0.01] and ursolic treatment acid X bupropion treatment interaction [F(1, 30)=4.41,
27
28 P<0.05].
29
30
31 Table 3 shows that ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) alone or in combination with
32
33
34 SKF38393 (0.1 mg/kg, s.c.) did not cause any change in the locomotor activity of mice, as
35
36 revealed by two-way ANOVA: ursolic acid pretreatment [F(1, 28)=2.69, P=0.11], SKF38393
37
38
39 treatment [F(1, 28)=0.02, P=0.88] and ursolic acid X SKF38393 interaction [F(1, 28)=1.103,
40
41 P=0.75]. Also, the number of the rearings of mice treated with ursolic acid and/or SKF38393 was
42
43
44
not significantly different from the control group. The two-way ANOVA showed no significant
45
46 differences for ursolic acid treatment [F(1, 28)=2.00, P=0.16], SKF38393 treatment [F(1,
47
48 28)=0.20, P=0.65] and ursolic acid X SKF38393 interaction [F(1, 28)=0.13, P=0.72] on rearing
49
50
51 responses.
52
53
54 Similarly, Table 3 shows that ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) alone or in combination with
55
56
57 apomorphine (0.5 Pg/kg, i.p.) caused no significant effects on the number of crossings and
58 11
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
rearings in the open-field test as shown by two-way ANOVA: Crossings: ursolic acid treatment
1 [F(1, 28)=0.45, P=0.50], apomorphine treatment [F(1, 28)=0.70, P=0.40] and ursolic acid X
2
3
4
apomorphine interaction [F(1, 28)=1.07, P=0.30]; Rearings: ursolic acid pretreatment [F(1,
5
6 28)=0.00, P=0.96], apomorphine treatment [F(1, 28)=0.16, P=0.28] and ursolic acid X
7
8 apomorphine interaction [F(1, 28)=1.06, P=0.31].
9
10
11
12 Table 3 also shows that the pretreatment of ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o.) and bupropion
13
14 (1 mg/kg, p.o.) alone or in combination did not cause any change in the crossing and rearing
15
16
17 responses in the open-field test, as revealed by two-way ANOVA. Crossings: ursolic acid
18
19 treatment [F(1, 28)=0.38, P=0.54], bupropion treatment [F(1, 28)=0.84, P=0.36] and ursolic acid
20
21 X bupropion interaction [F(1, 28)=1.16, P=0.29]; Rearings: ursolic acid treatment [F(1,
22
23
24 28)=0.29, P=0.59], bupropion treatment [F(1, 28)=0.73, P=0.39] and ursolic acid X bupropion
25
26 interaction [F(1, 28)=0.01, P=0.93].
27
28
29
30 [Figure 3 and Table 3 near here]
31
32
33
34
35
36 4. Discussion
37
38
39
40 This study shows, to our knowledge for the first time, that the acute administration of
41
42 ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg) by p.o. route is effective in reducing the immobility time in the mouse
43
44
TST, which is consistent with an antidepressant-like effect of this compound. The TST is reported
45
46
47 to be a predictive test of antidepressant action sensitive to the acute administration of
48
49 antidepressant drugs (Cryan et al., 2005; Steru et al., 1985). This test induces a state of immobility
50
51
52 in animals facing an inescapable situation and the antidepressant-like activity of a compound is
53
54 expressed by a decrease in the immobility duration (Steru et al., 1985). However, it should be
55
56
57 considered that drugs enhancing the locomotor activity may give a false positive effect in this test.
58 12
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
Thus, in order to rule out the possibility that the reduction in the immobility time elicited by a
1 drug is due to an enhancement in the locomotor activity, behavioral tests assessing the
2
3
4
locomotor activity of mice, such as the open-field test, are usually employed. In this study, we
5
6 observed that the reduction in the immobility time elicited by ursolic acid in TST is not due to a
7
8 psychostimulant action, since the doses (0.01 and 0.1 mg/kg) of this compound that were able to
9
10
11 induce a significant decrease in the immobility time in the TST did not increase the locomotor
12
13 activity in the open-field. Indeed, a tendency to decrease the number of crossings and rearings in
14
15
16 this test was observed, which may underestimate the antidepressant-like effect of this compound.
17
18
19 Ursolic acid is one of the main constituent of Rosmarinus officinalis (Benincá et al., 2011).
20
21 It is interesting to note that the extract from this plant exerts antidepressant-like effect in the TST
22
23
24 at the dose range of 10-100 mg/kg, p.o. (Machado et al., 2009). Therefore, the results presented
25
26 here indicate that ursolic acid has greater potency (but similar efficacy) as compared to the extract
27
28
29 from Rosmarinus officinalis in the TST, since it produces antidepressant-like effect at a dose 100-
30
31 10,000 fold lower than the active doses of the extract from Rosmarinus officinalis. These results
32
33
34 indicate that ursolic acid exerts a significant role in the antidepressant-like effect of the extract of
35
36 this plant in the TST.
37
38
39 A protective role for ursolic acid against the cell death induced by the dopaminergic
40
41
42 neurotoxin MPP+ in PC12 cells (Tsai and Yin, 2008) through anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory
43
44 mechanisms was recently reported. However, this result also suggests that this compound might
45
46
47 modulate the dopaminergic system. Noteworthy, this system has been implicated in
48
49 pathophysiology of depression and in the mechanism of action of some antidepressant agents
50
51
52 (Dally et al., 2004; Dunlop and Nemeroff, 2007; Papakostas, 2006; Yamada et al., 2004). Several
53
54 clinical studies, including postmortem investigations, have show that depression may be related to
55
56 reduced dopamine levels and its metabolite homovanillic acid in the brain in depressed and/or
57
58 13
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
suicidal patients compared to normal individuals, indicating a diminished dopamine turnover
1 (Dunlop and Nemeroff, 2007; Ebmeier et al., 2006; Papakostas, 2006). Since dopamine is the
2
3
4
main neurotransmitter involved in the mesocorticolimbic reward pathway, it has been proposed
5
6 that an increase in dopaminergic neurotransmission might counteract the anhedonia, which is a
7
8 core symptom of depression (D'Aquila et al., 2000). Moreover, some substances that modulate the
9
10
11 dopaminergic system, such as bupropion, are clinically used as antidepressants (Dhillon et al.,
12
13 2008).
14
15
16
17 Animal models predictive of antidepressant action, such as the TST show considerable
18
19 responsiveness to manipulations of dopaminergic neurotransmission (Dunlop and Nemeroff,
20
21 2007). Previous studies of our group literature data have shown that conventional and putative
22
23
24 antidepressant agents (Binfaré et al., 2009, 2010; Cunha et al., 2008; Hirano et al., 2007) as well
25
26 as plant extracts and their bioactive compounds whose mechanisms of action are mediated, at least
27
28
29 in part, by the modulation of the dopaminergic system produce positive results in the TST (Capra
30
31 et al., 2010; Freitas et al., 2010; Machado et al., 2007, 2009; Yi et al., 2011).
32
33
34
35
The results presented here clearly indicate that the dopaminergic system is implicated in
36
37 the antidepressant-like action of ursolic acid in the TST. This conclusion derives from some set of
38
39 evidence. First, the reversal of the antidepressant-like effect of ursolic acid by SCH23390 or
40
41
42 sulpiride, selective dopamine D1 and D2 receptor antagonists, respectively, is an indicative that the
43
44 effect of ursolic acid in the TST is dependent on the activation of these receptors. This result is
45
46
47 somewhat in agreement with previous studies that show that SCH23390 and sulpiride are able to
48
49 prevent the antidepressant-like effect of bupropion in the forced swimming test (Yamada et al.,
50
51
52 2004) and several putative antidepressant agents in the TST (Binfaré et al., 2010; Capra et al.,
53
54 2010; Hirano et al., 2007; Machado et al., 2009; Yi et al., 2011). The second evidence is given by
55
56 the finding that the administration of a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid with SKF38393
57
58 14
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
(dopamine D1 receptor agonist) or apomorphine (dopamine D2 receptor agonist) produced a
1 reduction in the immobility time, as compared with the administration of either drug alone,
2
3
4
suggesting a synergistic effect of ursolic acid with these agonists in the TST. This result further
5
6 reinforces the notion that the antidepressant-like effect of ursolic acid in this test is dependent on
7
8 an activation of dopamine D1 and D2 receptors. Furthermore, the synergistic antidepressant-like
9
10
11 effect of ursolic acid with bupropion, a dopamine reuptake inhibitor, demonstrated in this work
12
13 reinforces this conclusion. Similarly to the result observed here, a previous study has shown the
14
15
16 synergistic antidepressant-like effect of zinc with bupropion in the TST (Cunha et al., 2008).
17
18 However, it is important to emphasize that the current results do not allow us to indicate whether
19
20
21 ursolic acid directly interact with dopamine D1 and D2 receptors or whether it enhance dopamine
22
23 levels in the synaptic cleft that in turn activates these receptors. Further studies are necessary to
24
25
better clarify this issue.
26
27
28
29 It should be emphasized that all the results presented here cannot be attributed to a
30
31 locomotor effect, since the administration of ursolic acid alone or in combination with all the
32
33
34 dopaminergic agents did not significantly affect the ambulatory or exploratory behavior of mice in
35
36 the open-field test.
37
38
39 The importance of our results are highlighted by the fact that dopamine receptor agonists
40
41
42 have been thought as one of the promising candidates to improve outcomes of patients with
43
44 treatment-resistant and non remitting depression (Dunlop and Nemeroff, 2007; Rakofsky et al.,
45
46
47 2009). Moreover, it is noteworthy that the reduction in the immobility time (27.1%) elicited by
48
49 ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg, p.o) in the TST is similar to the effect (27.4% reduction in the immobility
50
51
52 time in the TST) produced by bupropion administered at a dose 100 fold higher (10 mg/kg, p.o.)
53
54 (Cunha et al., 2008). Therefore, it remains to be established if ursolic acid alone or in combination
55
56
57
58 15
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
with bupropion is effective in animals models of depression associated with anhedonia, a core
1 symptom of depression.
2
3
4 5. Conclusion
5
6
7
8 The present work demonstrates that ursolic acid is effective in producing an
9
10 antidepressant-like effect in the TST when administered by p.o. route. Moreover, a clear
11
12
13 involvement of the dopaminergic system in its antidepressant-like effect was indicated by the
14
15 reversal of its effect by the pretreatment of mice with dopamine D1 and D2 receptor antagonists
16
17
and also, by the synergistic antidepressant-like effect afforded by the dopamine D1 and D2 receptor
18
19
20 agonists, as well as the antidepressant bupropion. Altogether, the results suggest that an activation
21
22 of dopamine D1 and D2 receptors is implicated in the antidepressant-like effect of ursolic acid in
23
24
25 the TST. Overall, the results reported in the present study indicate the antidepressant potential of
26
27 ursolic acid in a preclinical test widely recognized as effective to assess antidepressant activity,
28
29
30 suggesting that it should be further investigated as a possible agent for the treatment of depression.
31
32
33
34
35
36 Acknowledgements
37
38
39
40 This work was supported by grants from the Fundação de Apoio a Pesquisa Científica e
41
42 Tecnológica do Estado de Santa Catarina (FAPESC), CNPq and CAPES (Brazil), and the FINEP
43
44
45
research grant “Rede Instituto Brasileiro de Neurociência (IBN-Net)” # 01.06.0842-00.
46
47
48 Conflict of interest
49
50
51 The Authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.
52
53
54
55
56
57
58 16
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
References
1
2 Akhondzadeh S, Maleki J. Herbal medicines in the treatment of psychiatric and neurological
3
4 disorders. Iran J Psychiatry 2006;1:1-11.
5
6
7 Baricevic D, Sosa S, Della LR, Tubaro A, Simonovska B, Krasna A, Zupancic. Topical anti-
8
9
10 inflammatory activity of Salvia officinalis L. leaves: the relevance of ursolic acid. J
11
12 Ethnopharmacol 2001;75:125-32.
13
14
15 Benincá JP, Dalmarco JB, Pizzolatti MG, Fröde TS. Analysis of the anti-inflammatory properties
16
17
18 of Rosmarinus officinalis L. in mice. Food Chem 2011;124:468-75.
19
20
21 Bilia AR, Gallori S, Vincieri FF. St. John's Wort and depression. Efficacy, safety and tolerability-
22
23 an update. Life Sci 2002;70:3077-96.
24
25
26 Binfaré RW, Rosa AO, Lobato KR, Santos ARS, Rodrigues ALS. Ascorbic acid administration
27
28 produces an antidepressant-like effect: evidence for the involvement of monoaminergic
29
30
31 neurotransmission. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2009;33:530-40.
32
33
34 Binfaré RW, Mantovani M, Budni J, Santos ARS, Rodrigues ALS. Involvement of dopamine
35
36 receptors in the antidepressant-like effect of melatonin in the tail suspension test. Eur J
37
38
39 Pharmacol 2010;638:78-83.
40
41
42 Brunello N, Mendlewicz J, Kasper S, Leonard B, Montgomery S, Nelson J, Paykel E, Versiani M,
43
44 Racagni G. The role of noradrenaline and selective noradrenaline reuptake inhibition in
45
46
47
depression. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol 2002;12:461-75.
48
49
50
Capra JC, Cunha MP, Machado DG, Zomkowski ADE, Mendes BG, Santos ARS, Pizzolatti MG,
51
52 Rodrigues ALS. Antidepressant-like effect of scopoletin, a coumarin isolated from
53
54 Polygala sabulosa (Polygalaceae) in mice: Evidence for the involvement of
55
56
57 monoaminergic systems. Eur J Pharmacol 2010;643:232-8.
58 17
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
Cryan JF, Mombereau C, Vassout A. The tail suspension test as a model for assessing
1
2 Figure 1. Effect of the acute treatment of mice with ursolic acid (0.001-10 mg/kg, p.o.) on the
3
4 immobility time in the TST. Each column represents the mean +S.E.M. of 7-10 animals. *
5
6
7 P<0.05, ** P<0.01 compared with the vehicle-treated control (C).
8
9
10 Figure 2. Effect of pretreatment of mice with SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c., a dopamine D 1
11
12 receptor antagonist; panel A) or sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor
13
14
15 antagonist; panel B) on the ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg, p.o)-induced reduction in immobility
16
17 time in the TST. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 8-9 animals. **P <0.01
18
19
20
compared with the vehicle-treated control. # P<0.01 as compared with ursolic acid group
21
22 pretreated with vehicle.
23
24
25 Figure 3. Effect of a sub-effective dose of ursolic acid (0.001 mg/kg, p.o) in combination with
26
27 SKF38393 (0.1 mg/kg, s.c., a dopamine D1 receptor agonist; panel A), apomorphine (0.5
28
29
30 Pg/kg, i.p., a dopamine D2 receptor agonist; panel B) or bupropion (1 mg/kg, p.o, a
31
32 dopamine reuptake inhibitor, panel C) in the TST. Each column represents the mean +
33
34
35 S.E.M. of 7-9 animals. *P <0.05, **P <0.01 compared with the vehicle-treated control.
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58 22
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
Table(s)
Tables
Table 1. Effect of the acute treatment of mice with ursolic acid (0.001-10 mg/kg, p.o.) on the
immobility time in the number of crossings and rearings in the open-field test.
Table 2. Effect of the administration of ursolic acid (0.1 mg/kg, p.o.) alone or in combination with
SCH23390 (0.05 mg/kg, s.c.) or sulpiride (50 mg/kg, i.p.) in the number of the crossings
Table 3. Effect of the administration of ursolic acid (0.001mg/kg, p.o.) alone or in combination
with SKF38393 (0.1 mg/kg, s.c.), apomorphine (0.5 Pg/kg, i.p.) or bupropion (1 mg/kg,
p.o.) in the number of the crossings and rearings in the open-field test.
Crossings Rearings
MACHAD~1.PZM:Figure 1 - Fri Sep 30 09:54:27 2011
Figure 1
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 1.pdf
250
200
* **
150
100
50
Vehicle
A Ursolic acid
250
#
Immobility time (s)
200
150
100
**
50
0
Vehicle SCH23390
Vehicle
Ursolic acid
250
B
#
Immobility time (s)
200
150
100
**
50
0
Vehicle Sulpiride
MACHAD~1.PZM:Firure 3 - Fri Sep 30 10:00:12 2011
Figure 3
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 3.pdf
A Vehicle
250 Ursolic acid
150
**
100
50
0
Vehicle SKF 38396
B Vehicle
250 Ursolic acid
Immobility time (s)
200
150 *
100
50
0
Vehicle Apomorphine
C Vehicle
250 Ursolic acid
Immobility time (s)
200
150
**
100
50
0
Vehicle Bupropion
117
CAPÍTULO 4
1 The olfactory bulbectomy (OB) is an animal model of depression that results in behavioral,
2
3 neurochemical and neuroendocrinological changes, features comparable to those seen in depressive
4
5
6 patients. This study investigated OB-induced alterations in locomotor activity and exploratory
7
8 behavior in the open-field test, anhedonic behavior in splash test, hyperactivity in the novel object test
9
10
11
and novel cage test, and the influence of chronic treatment with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o. once daily
12
13 for 14 days) on these parameters. Fluoxetine reversed OB-induced hyperactivity in the open-field test,
14
15 the locomotor hyperactivity and the increased of the exploratory behavior induced by novelty in the
16
17
18 novel object test and novel cage test, and anhedonic behavior in the splash test. Moreover, OB
19
20 decreased the number of grooming and fecal boli in the open-field and novel cage test, alterations that
21
22
23 were not reversed by fluoxetine. OB caused an increase in hippocampal, but not cerebrocortical AChE
24
25 activity. Fluoxetine was able to reverse the increased hippocampal AChE activity induced by OB.
26
27
28 Serum corticosterone was increased in SHAM and bulbectomized mice treated with fluoxetine. In
29
30 conclusion, OB mice exhibited hyperactivity and anhedonia associated with an increased hippocampal
31
32
33
AChE activity, effects that were reversed by chronic treatment with fluoxetine.
34
35
36
37
38
39 Keywords: anhedonic behavior; acethylcholinesterase; fluoxetine; hyperactivity; olfactory bulbectomy.
40
41
42 Abbreviations: AChE, enzyme acetylcholinesterase; ANOVA, analysis of variance; HPA,
43
44
45 hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis; OB, olfactory bulbectomy; 5-HT, serotonin; SSRI,
46
47 selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor.
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62 2
63
64
65
1. Introduction
1
2
3
4
5
Animal models are widely used tools for understanding the mechanisms responsible for the
6
7 etiology and treatment of various diseases, including depression. The olfactory bulbectomy (OB) is an
8
9 animal model of depression characterized by the bilateral destruction of the olfactory bulbs, which
10
11
12 produces behavioral, neurochemical and neuroendocrinological changes that resemble some of the
13
14 symptoms observed in depressed patients (Kelly et al., 1997; Leonard, 1984; Song and Leonard,
15
16
17 2005). OB causes several modifications in brain regions, as consequence of the disrupted connections
18
19 between the bulbs and other brain regions, mainly the olfactory - limbic circuitry (Jesberger and
20
21
22
Richardson, 1988; Kelly et al., 1997; Song and Leonard, 2005). The lesion caused by OB induces a
23
24 reorganization processes in the limbic and cortical areas and appears to be responsible for the
25
26 secondary effect, behavioral abnormalities appearing after 2 weeks in rodents (Jarosik et al., 2007;
27
28
29 Van Riezen and Leonard, 1990; Zueger et al., 2005 ).
30
31 A hyperactivity response, the major behavioral change in this model, can be reversed by
32
33
34 chronic treatments with antidepressants, mimicking the slow onset of antidepressant action reported in
35
36 clinical studies (Kelly et al., 1997; Leonard and Tuite, 1981; Van Riezen and Leonard, 1990).
37
38
39 Furthermore, OB leads to different signs of anhedonia, combined with cognitive deficits (Harkin et al.,
40
41 2003; Kelly et al., 1997; Song and Leonard, 2005). Most of the studies evaluate only hyperactivity in
42
43
bulbectomized rodents (Harkin, et al., 2003; Kelly et al., 1997; Leonard, 1984; Song and Leonard,
44
45
46 2005; Zueger et al., 2005). There are scarce literature results reporting anhedonic behavior associated
47
48 with hyperactivity in bulbectomized rats (Romeas et al., 2009).
49
50
51 OB has been argued to possess good face validity with human depressive disorder, especially
52
53 agitated depression (Harkin et al., 2003; Kelly et al., 1997; Lumia et al., 1992; Romeas et al., 2009).
54
55
56 Another important behavioral change triggered by OB is the increased vulnerability and
57
58 responsiveness to stress induced by novelty. These behavioral deficits may result from inappropriate
59
60
61
62 3
63
64
65
and enhanced reactivity to a novel environment (Leonard and Tuite, 1981; Song and Leonard, 2005;
1 further studies.
2
3 This study was aimed at investigating the effects of chronic administration of fluoxetine in
4
5
6 three main behavioral changes induced by OB in mice: hyperactivity in open-field test, hyperactivity
7
8 induced by novelty, and anhedonic behavior. In addition, the present study investigated the effects of
9
10
11
OB on serum corticosterone and hippocampal and cerebrocortical acethylcholinesterase (AchE)
12
13 activity as well as the ability of chronic fluoxetine treatment to reverse the possible OB-induced
14
15 alterations in these biochemical parameters.
16
17
18
19
20 2. Materials and methods
21
22
23 2.1. Animals
24
25 Female Swiss mice (50 to 55 days old, weighing 35-40 g) were used for this study and
26
27
28 maintained at constant room temperature (21±1qC) with free access to water and food, under a 12:12h
29
30 light:dark cycle (lights on at 07:00 h). Mice were allowed to acclimatize to the holding room for 24 h
31
32
33 before the behavioral procedure. All experiments were carried out between 9:00 and 16:00 h, (N= 9-
34
35 11 animals per group). The procedures in this study were performed in accordance with the National
36
37
38
Institute of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and approved by the Ethics
39
40 Committee of the Institution. All efforts were made to minimize animals suffering and to reduce the
41
42 number of animals used in the experiments.
43
44
45 After 14 post-operative days (recovery period), mice were assigned to the following groups: (I)
46
47 SHAM-operated/distilled water (SHAM/vehicle) as the control group, (II) SHAM-
48
49
50 operated/antidepressant treated mice (SHAM/fluoxetine); (III) bulbectomized mice treated with
51
52 distilled water for 14 days (bulbectomized/vehicle); (IV) bulbectomized mice treated with fluoxetine
53
54
55 for 14 days (bulbectomized/fluoxetine).
56
57
58
59
60
2.2. Drugs and treatment
61
62 5
63
64
65
Fluoxetine from Sigma Chemical Company, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A. was used. Fluoxetine was
1 dissolved in distilled water and given once a day per oral route (p.o.) by gavage over a period of 14
2
3 days (in a constant volume of 10 ml/kg body weight) at a dose of 10 mg/kg. The solutions were
4
5
6 freshly prepared each day. Controls received an identical volume of distilled water (vehicle). The
7
8 administration schedule and the dose of the drug used were chosen on the basis of experiments
9
10
11
previously performed in our laboratory and literature data (Machado et al., 2007, 2009; Rodríguez-
12
13 Gaztelumendi et al., 2009).
14
15
16
17
18 2.3. Bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OB) surgery
19
20 After a 2-week acclimatization period, OB was performed according to Leonard and Tuite,
21
22
23 1981. Briefly, mice were anesthetized with xylazin (20 mg/kg; Virbac©, Brazil) in combination with
24
25 ketamine (100 mg/kg; Virbac©, Brazil), diluted in saline (0.9% NaCl) administered by intraperitoneal
26
27
28 (i.p.) route in a constant volume of 10 ml/kg body weight. The skull covering the olfactory bulbs was
29
30 exposed by skin incision and two burr hole were drilled using a dentist drill. The olfactory bulbs were
31
32
33
bilaterally aspirated by blunt hypodermic needle (with for 1.0 to 1.2 cm long and with a rounded tip of
34
35 0.80 to 1.2 mm of diameter) attached the syringe (10 ml) for the suction, taking care not to cause
36
37 damage to the frontal cortex. Finally, the burr hole was filled with acrylic resin, in order to avoid
38
39
40 bleeding and contamination at the surgical site. SHAM-operations were performed in the same way,
41
42 but with the olfactory bulbs left intact. After this surgical procedure, all animals recovered in a post-
43
44
45 operative cage (24°C) for 3 hours. After this time period, mice were returned to their home cage. The
46
47 technique was adapted (Leonard, 1984; Leonard and Tuite, 1981; Van Riezen and Leonard, 1990;
48
49
50
Zueger et al., 2005) and standardized in our laboratory.
51
52 At the end of the experiments, all animals were sacrificed and the lesions were verified. The
53
54 bulbectomized animals that showed incomplete removal or damage to other brain area were excluded
55
56
57 from the subsequent analysis (Jarosik et al., 2007; Kelly et al., 1997) (less than 15% of the total).
58
59
60
61
62 6
63
64
65
The 14 days post-surgery was used as a period sufficient for an adequate recovery of animals.
1 In this period, the development of persistent BO-induced effects, such as increase of locomotor
2
3 activity and exploratory behavior are observed (Jarosik et al., 2007; Van Riezen and Leonard, 1990;
4
5
6 Zueger et al., 2005).
7
8 As depicted in Figure 1, fourteen days after surgery (1°-14° Day, recovery period), drug
9
10
11
treatment was started and continued for a period of 14 days (15°-28° Day, treatment period).
12
13
14
15 [Figure 1 near here]
16
17
18
19
20 2.4. Behavioral Tests
21
22
23 One day before surgery, the locomotor activity and exploratory behavior was analyzed in open-
24
25 field test. Behavioral changes after OB and/or chronic treatment with fluoxetine was examined by
26
27
28 testing locomotor activity and exploratory behavior in open-field 2 and 4 weeks after OB (2 weeks
29
30 after the beginning of chronic fluoxetine treatment), as depicted in Figure 1. All tests were carried out
31
32
33
during the light phase of the light/dark cycle. On the first test day (day 29 of the experiment, 24 h after
34
35 the last drug treatment), mice were submitted to the open-field test. After two hours, mice were
36
37 submitted to splash test in order to investigate anhedonic behavior. On the second test day (day 30 of
38
39
40 the experiment, 48 hours after the last drug treatment), mice were tested in the novel object test. On
41
42 day 31 (72 h after the last drug treatment), mice were tested in the novel cage test. Light intensity was
43
44
45 approximately 200 lux.
46
47
48
49
50 2.4.1. Open-field test
51
52 The open-field test was used to investigate locomotor activity and exploratory behavior, since
53
54 locomotor hyperactivity is the key behavioral feature of bulbectomized rodents. Mice were
55
56
57 individually placed in a wooden box (40×60×50 cm) with the floor divided into 12 squares. Number
58
59 of crossings (number of squares crossed by the animal with the four paws) were used to evaluate
60
61
62 7
63
64
65
locomotor activity and number of rearings (number of times the mice stood on its hind legs or vertical
1 exploratory activity) to assess the exploratory behavior (Machado et al., 2009; Van Riezen and
2
3 Leonard, 1990; Zueger et al., 2007). Additionally, the number of grooming (washing of the coat) and
4
5
6 fecal boli were registered (Kalueff and Tuohimaa, 2004; Walsh and Cummins, 1976).
7
8 These parameters were registered in a 6-min period. The apparatus was cleaned with a solution
9
10
11
of ethanol 10% between tests in order to remove animal odors or clues.
12
13
14
15
2.4.2. Splash test
16
17
18 The splash test was adapted from the one used by Yalcin et al., 2005. This test was carried out
19
20 to evaluate grooming behavior, defined as cleaning of the fur by licking or scratching, after the
21
22
23 vaporization of 10% sucrose solution on the dorsal coat of mice. The viscosity of the sucrose solution
24
25 dirties the coat and animals initiate grooming behavior, with depressive symptoms characterized by an
26
27
28 increased latency (idle time between spray and initiation of grooming) and decreased time spent
29
30 grooming (d'Audiffret et al., 2010). Latency and time spent grooming were recorded for 5 min.
31
32
33
34
35 2.4.3. Novel object test
36
37 The novel object test was performed in the same arena and test conditions employed for the
38
39
40 open-field test, in order to evaluate the exploratory behavior of mice submitted to an unknown object
41
42 (50 ml Falcon tube stylized with colorful stripes, placed top down). In this experimental protocol, the
43
44
45 novel object was placed in the center of the open-field (wooden box measuring 40 x 60 x 50 cm, with
46
47 the floor divided into a central area measuring 19.5 x 18.5 cm). The outdoor area that exceeds the
48
49
50
central part is considered peripheral area. Latency for entering the central area of the apparatus where
51
52 the novel object was, time spent exploring the novel object and numbers of rearings in the central area
53
54 of the apparatus were recorded for 6 minutes (adapted from Zueger et al. 2005). The apparatus was
55
56
57 cleaned with a solution of ethanol 10% between tests in order to remove animal odors or clues.
58
59
60
61
62 8
63
64
65
2.4.4. Novel cage test
1 To investigate the exploratory behavior of the animal in a novel environment, a circular blue
2
3 plastic arena (d = 44 cm h = 22 cm) with the floor divided into 9 parts was used. The animals were
4
5
6 placed in the center of this apparatus in the beginning of the test. The number of crossings and
7
8 rearings were recorded for 6 minutes (Adapted protocol from Zueger et al., 2005). Additionally, the
9
10
11
number of grooming (washing of the coat) and fecal boli were registered (Kalueff and Tuohimaa,
12
13 2004; Walsh and Cummins, 1976).
14
15 After each test, the apparatus was sprayed with a solution of ethanol 10% and wiped
16
17
18 thoroughly to clean and eliminate the residual odor.
19
20
21
22
23 2.5. Biochemical analysis
24
25 The blood collection was performed by decapitation 6 hours after the last behavioral test of the
26
27
28 experimental protocol, as depicted in Figure 1. The blood samples were collected and allowed to
29
30 coagulate at room temperature for 30 min and were subsequently centrifuged at 3.000g for 10 min.
31
32
33
Serum was removed and stored at -80°C until analysis.
34
35 For AchE determination, hippocampus and frontal cortex were homogenized in potassium
36
37 phosphate buffer (0.1 M, pH 8). The homogenates were centrifuged at 2300 X g for 15 min
38
39
40 and the supernatant was separated and stored at -80°C until analysis.
41
42
43
44
45 2.5.1. Serum corticosterone determination
46
47 Serum corticosterone concentration was determined by a commercially available ELISA kit
48
49
50
according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Assay Designs Inc., Ann Arbor, MI).
51
52
53
54
2.5.2. Determination of AChE activity
55
56
57 AChE activity was measured by the method of Ellman et al. 1961, using acetylthiocholine
58
59 iodide as a substrate in homogenates of hippocampus and cerebral cortex. Each sample was taken from
60
61
62 9
63
64
65
one animal and assayed in triplicate. The rate of hydrolysis of acetylthiocholine iodide was measured
1 at 412 nm through the release of the thiol compound which when reacted with DTNB produced the
2
3 color-forming compound thionitrobenzoic acid.
4
5
6
7
8 2.5.3. Protein determination
9
10
11
The protein content in hippocampal and frontal cortex homogenate samples was quantified by
12
13 the method of Bradford, 1976, using bovine serum albumin as standard.
14
15
16
17
18 2.6. Statistical analysis
19
20 Comparisons between pre-operative and post-operative period (SHAM X OB groups) were
21
22
23 performed by repeated one-way ANOVA. Two-way ANOVA was used for the study of the post-
24
25 treatment period (SHAM X OB-vehicle treatment and SHAM X OB-fluoxetine treatment groups),
26
27
28 followed by Duncan’s multiple range post-hoc test when appropriate. All data are expressed as mean ±
29
30 standard error of the mean (S.E.M.). Differences with P<0.05 were considered statistically
31
32
33
significant.
34
35
36
37 3. Results
38
39
40 3.1. OB-induced locomotor and exploratory behavior in the open-field test
41
42 Two weeks after OB (post-operative period), bulbectomized mice showed increased number of
43
44
45 crossings (67.4%) and rearings (74.4%) in the open-field test (Figure 2A and 2B, respectively), which
46
47 indicates an increased locomotor and exploratory behavior. Moreover, locomotor and exploratory
48
49
50
activities of bulbectomized mice were higher than those observed in SHAM-group (73.0% and
51
52 107.6%, respectively). The repeated measures one-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of OB
53
54 [F(1,38)= 35.39, P<0.01] and time [F(1,38)= 34.09 P<0.01] in locomotor activity and exploratory
55
56
57 behavior, respectively, when compared to SHAM-operated controls.
58
59
60
61
62 10
63
64
65
[Figure 2 near here]
1
2
3 3.2. Effect of chronic treatment with fluoxetine on OB-induced locomotor and exploratory
4
5
6 hyperactivity in the open-field test
7
8 The results depicted in Figure 3A and 3B show that bulbectomized mice presented an
9
10
11
increased number of crossing (110.9% of increase) and rearing responses (309.5% of increase) in the
12
13 open-field test, as compared to control group (SHAM-vehicle), indicating and OB-induced
14
15 enhancement of locomotor and exploratory activities. However, bulbectomized mice submitted to
16
17
18 chronic treatment with fluoxetine by oral route, demonstrated a significant decrease in locomotor
19
20 activity and exploratory behavior as compared to the OB-vehicle. The two-way ANOVA revealed a
21
22
23 significant main effect of OB [F(1,36) = 13.14, P<0.01] and treatment X OB interaction [F(1,36) =
24
25 10.03, P<0.01], but no significant effect of the treatment [F(1,36) = 0.71, P=0.40] in locomotor
26
27
28 activity in the open-field test. The two-way ANOVA also revealed a significant effect of OB [F(1,36)
29
30 = 11.37, P<0.01], treatment X OB interaction [F(1,36) = 16.24, P<0.01], but no significant effect of
31
32
33
the treatment [F(1,36) = 0.21, P=0.64] in exploratory activity (rearing responses) in the open-field test.
34
35 Additionaly, bulbectomized mice presented a decrease in the number of grooming and fecal
36
37 boli as compared to the control group (SHAM-vehicle) (Figure 3C and 3D, respectively). Fluoxetine
38
39
40 did not reverse the OB-induced alterations on these parameters. The two-way ANOVA revealed a
41
42 significant main effect of OB: [F(1,36) = 10.55, P<0.01], but no significant effect of treatment:
43
44
45 [F(1,36) = 2.37, P=0.13] and treatment X OB interaction: [F(1,36) = 0.25, P=0.61] in number of
46
47 grooming in the open-field test. The two-way ANOVA also revealed a significant effect of OB:
48
49
50
[F(1,36) = 14.81, P<0.01], but no significant effect of the treatment: [F(1,36) = 0.52, P=0.47] and
51
52 treatment X OB interaction: [F(1,36) = 3.56, P=0.067] in number of fecal boli in the open-field test.
53
54
55
56
57 [Figure 3 near here]
58
59
60
61
62 11
63
64
65
3.3. Effect of chronic treatment with fluoxetine on OB- induced hyperactivity induced by novelty
1 Noteworthy, chronic treatment with fluoxetine significantly reversed these behavioural changes
2
3 elicited by OB (Figure 6A and 6B, respectively). The two-way ANOVA revealed a significant main
4
5
6 effect of OB [F(1,35): 9.43, P<0.01] and a significant effect of treatment X OB interaction [F(1,35):
7
8 4.31, P<0.05,], but no significant main effect of treatment [F(1,35): 1.54, P=0.222] in the latency to
9
10
11
exhibit the grooming behavior in the splash test. The two-way ANOVA also revealed a significant
12
13 main effect of OB [F(1,35): 7.55, P<0.01], treatment [F(1,35): 17.68, P<0.01] and treatment X OB
14
15 interaction [F(1,35): 10.02, P<0.01] in the time spent grooming.
16
17
18
19
20 [Figure 6 near here]
21
22
23
24
25 3.6. Effect of chronic treatment with fluoxetine on serum corticosterone levels in bulbectomized
26
27
28 mice
29
30 Figure 7 shows that chronic administration of fluoxetine increased serum corticosterone levels
31
32
33
in both SHAM and OB groups, as compared with their respective control groups (SHAM-vehicle and
34
35 OB-vehicle, respectively). Additionally, serum corticosterone levels were not significantly increased
36
37 in bulbectomized mice, although a 2.5 fold increase was observed in OB group as compared with the
38
39
40 control group (SHAM-vehicle). The two-way ANOVA revealed a significant main effect of OB [F
41
42 (1,31) = 10.27, P< 0.01] and treatment [F (1,31) = 101.54, P< 0.01], but not of treatment x OB
43
44
45 interaction [F (1,31) = 1.83, P= 0.18].
46
47
48
49
50
[Figure 7 near here]
51
52
53
54
3.7. Effect of chronic treatment with fluoxetine on cerebrocortical and hippocampal AChE
55
56
57 activity of bulbectomized mice
58
59 Figure 8 shows the effect of chronic administration of fluoxetine on the activity of the enzyme
60
61
62 14
63
64
65
acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the frontal cortex (Figure 8A) and hippocampus (Figure 8B) of
1 bulbectomized mice. As demonstrated in Figure 8A, the activity of the enzyme AChE in the frontal
2
3 cortex was lower in the group of bulbectomized mice treated with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) as
4
5
6 compared with the BO-vehicle group. The two-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of treatment
7
8 x OB interaction [F(1,25)=7.281, P<0.05], but not of OB [F(1,25)=1,379, P=0.251] and treatment
9
10
11
[F(1,25)=1.130, P=0.297] on the activity of AChE in the frontal cortex. However, Figure 8B shows a
12
13 significant increase on hippocampal AChE enzyme activity of bulbectomized mice, as compared with
14
15 control group (SHAM-vehicle), an effect reversed by fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.). The two-way
16
17
18 ANOVA revealed significant main effect of OB [F(1,25)=4.819, P<0.05], treatment [F(1,25)=6.919,
19
20 P<0.05] and treatment X OB interaction [F(1,25)=4.316, P<0.05] in the activity of AChE in the
21
22
23 hippocampus.
24
25
26
27
28 [Figure 8 near here]
29
30
31
32
33
4. Discussion
34
35
36
37 The removal of olfactory bulbs in rodents results in several behavioral, neurochemical,
38
39
40 neuroendocrinological alterations, comparable to those seen in patients with major depression (Kelly
41
42 et al., 1997; Song and Leonard, 2005). The present study sought to investigate the ability of fluoxetine
43
44
45 administered chronically to reverse the OB-induced behavioral (mainly hyperactivity and anhedonia)
46
47 and biochemical (serum corticosterone and hippocampal and cerebrocortical acetylcholinesterase
48
49
50
activity) changes in mice. The majority of studies available in the literature report changes induced by
51
52 OB in male rats and few studies have investigated hyperactivity and anhedonic behavior in female
53
54 mice. Notably, depression is more prevalent in women than in men - the female:male ratio can be as
55
56
57 high as 5:2 (Wong and Licinio, 2001).
58
59
60
61
62 15
63
64
65
A distinguishing feature of OB is the association between hyperactivity with anhedonic
1 behavior. Thus, this model mimics the symptoms of depression associated with psychomotor agitation
2
3 (Romeas et al., 2009). Our results are in accordance with literature data, since the bulbectomized mice
4
5
6 showed a significant increase in locomotor and exploratory activities in the open-field test, indicating a
7
8 depressive-like behavior (Harkin et al., 2003; Kelly et al., 1997; Zueger et al., 2005). Noteworthy, the
9
10
11
open-field test was assessed under a high luminance condition, which was previously shown to be an
12
13 aversive condition necessary for bulbectomized animals present hyperactivity (Mar et al., 2002).
14
15 The effects of SSRI antidepressants have received more attention in OB model as compared to
16
17
18 other classes of antidepressants, since OB was reported to cause a hyposerotonergic depression-related
19
20 phenotype (Kelly et al., 1997; Lumia et al., 1992; Song and Leonad, 2005). However, the ability of
21
22
23 chronic treatment with fluoxetine in reversing hyperlocomotion in bulbectomized rodents is
24
25 controversial (Bellver et al., 1990; Butler et al., 1990; Mar et al., 2002; Possidente et al., 1996;
26
27
28 Rodríguez-Gaztelumendi et al., 2009). In the present study the administration of fluoxetine by oral
29
30 route (10 mg/kg) to female Swiss mice for 14 days was able to mitigate the changes in locomotor
31
32
33
activity and exploratory behavior triggered by OB, consistent with an antidepressant-like effect,
34
35 similarly to the results previously shown with the same dose of fluoxetine administered by i.p or s.c
36
37 route for 14 days (Butler et al., 1990; Rodríguez-Gaztelumendi et al., 2009) or for 21 days (Mar et al.,
38
39
40 2002) to male rats, validating the model for female mice.
41
42 In our investigation, bulbectomized mice showed locomotor hyperactivity and an increased
43
44
45 exploratory behavior induced by novelty, indicated by an increase in behavioral reactivity when
46
47 submitted to the novel object test (decreased latency for entering the central arena, increased time
48
49
50
spent exploring and increased rearings responses in the central area where the novel object was
51
52 located) and to the novel cage test (increased number of crossings and rearings in the new
53
54 environment). These results are consistent with literature data, since it is reported that the
55
56
57 hyperactivity induced by OB is directly related to a greater reactivity to novel environments or deficit
58
59 in habituation to new situations (Mar et al., 2000, 2002; Van Riezen and Leonard, 1990; Zueger et al.,
60
61
62 16
63
64
65
2005). These findings are similar to the ones reported by Zueger et al. (2005), which demonstrated an
1 increased exploration in the novel object test and exploratory behavior in novel cage test (neophilic
2
3 behavior) in bulbectomized mice. In addition to these results, they showed a decreased exploration in
4
5
6 the center of open-field in bulbectomized mice (anxious-like behavior) before the introduction of the
7
8 object in the center of the apparatus. In our study, we did not register the exploration of mice in the
9
10
11
center of the open-field before the introduction of the object in the center of the apparatus making the
12
13 comparison with the study by Zueger et al. (2005) difficult. However, the increased activity in novel
14
15 arenas and increased interaction with novel object might indicate an anxiolytic effect. This hypothesis
16
17
18 is apparently reinforced by the OB-induced decreased in the grooming and fecal boli in open-field test
19
20 and novel cage test. Nevertheless, it is important to mention that the decreased latency for entering the
21
22
23 central arena of the apparatus where the novel object was located may be due to an impulsive-like
24
25 activity a higher reactivity to a novel situation induced by the OB procedure. Enhanced locomotor
26
27
28 activity as observed in tests of exploratory behavior in novel environments, although traditionally
29
30 thought to represent an anxiolytic effect, could represent an increase in behavioral disinhibition, and
31
32
33
has also been described as an increase in impulsive behavior (Scearce-Levie et al., 1999; Winstanley
34
35 et al., 2004). Impulsivity can be broadly defined as action without foresight, and serotonin depletion
36
37 enhances impulsive action (Winstanley et al., 2004). It is noteworthy to observe that OB causes a
38
39
40 reduction in the levels of serotonin and its metabolites (Hellweg et al., 2007), a condition that could
41
42 account for the impulsive behavior.
43
44
45 Chronic treatment with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) was able to reverse OB-induced locomotor
46
47 hyperactivity and exploratory behavior induced by novelty in the novel object test as well as the OB-
48
49
50
induced increase in the number of crossings and rearings induced by novelty in the novel cage test.
51
52 These results are in accordance with other studies that indicate that chronic treatment with
53
54 antidepressants including fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, i.p., 21 days) are effective to restore normal
55
56
57 responding by permitting more effective adaptation to novel stimuli in the bulbectomized rodents.
58
59 Thus, these antidepressants increase the habituation induced by novelty in bulbectomized animals,
60
61
62 17
63
64
65
without altering this parameter in SHAM-group (Mar et al., 2000, 2002). Interestingly, a result that
1 extends literature data is that fluoxetine treatment was not able to alter the OB-induced decrease in the
2
3 latency for entering the central arena of the apparatus where the novel object was located. We can
4
5
6 speculate that this parameter is not associated with a depressive-like behavior, reinforcing the notion
7
8 that it may be related to the initial reactivity to the apparatus, suggesting an impulsive-like activity.
9
10
11
This hypothesis is somewhat in agreement with the one raised by Mars et al (2002) which proposes
12
13 that fluoxetine increases the rate of habituation in olfactory bulbectomized rats. It remains to be
14
15 established whether other antidepressant agents would be able to alter the OB-induced decrease in this
16
17
18 parameter.
19
20 Anhedonia, or hyposensitivity to pleasure, is one of the key symptoms of depression. This
21
22
23 behavior can be inferred through a reduction in sucrose intake or decreased time spent grooming that
24
25 is an indicative of self-cleaning behavior evoked by spraying a solution of sucrose in the back of the
26
27
28 animals in the splash test (Jancsar and Leonard, 1981; Song and Leonard, 2005; Yalcin et al., 2005).
29
30 In this test, the majority of studies use only the total time spent grooming or the frequency of
31
32
33
grooming as parameters to infer the anhedonic behavior induced by a model of depression (David et
34
35 al., 2009; Detanico et al., 2009; Yalcin et al., 2008). However, our study also assessed the latency in
36
37 the splash test as a complementary parameter to the assessment of anhedonia (d'Audiffret et al., 2010).
38
39
40 Our study show that OB produced an anhedonic behavior in the splash test, since bulbectomized mice
41
42 demonstrated both a slower and less frequent grooming response compared with that exhibited by
43
44
45 control mice (SHAM). This result is somewhat in agreement with a previous study that showed a
46
47 blunted response to the rewarding properties of amphetamine and a reduction in sucrose intake in
48
49
50
bulbectomized rats, also suggesting that OB causes anhedonia (Romeas et al., 2009; Stock et al.,
51
52 2000). Interestingly, in our study, fluoxetine was able to reverse the anhedonic-behavior induced by
53
54 OB in the splash test, indicating that OB is suitable to investigate the effects of compounds endowed
55
56
57 with antidepressant/antianhedonic-like properties.
58
59
60
61
62 18
63
64
65
In a second experimental phase of this study, some biochemical parameters that could be
1 changed by OB procedure, as serum corticosterone levels, and activity of the enzyme AChE in the
2
3 hippocampus and frontal cortex were investigated considering the relationship between hypofunction
4
5
6 of monoaminergic system, reported in bulbectomized rodents (Hellweg et al., 2007; Lumia et al.,
7
8 1992), with HPA and cholinergic dysfunctions (Krishnan and Nestler, 2008; Nakajima et al., 2007;
9
10
11
Nestler et al., 2002).
12
13 The concentration of corticosterone circulating in the serum was measured in bulbectomized
14
15 mice treated or not with fluoxetine as an indicator of the activation of the HPA axis. We found that
16
17
18 serum corticosterone level was not significantly increased in bulbectomized mice, although a 2.5 fold
19
20 increase was observed in animals submitted to OB as compared to sham control group. Indeed, either
21
22
23 an increase (Cairncross et al 1977; Marcilhac et al., 1999) or no changes (Broekkamp et al., 1986; Van
24
25 Hoomissen et al., 2011) in serum or plasma corticosterone levels were reported in bulbectomized
26
27
28 rodents. The nature relationship of cortisol with human depression remains uncertain, since HPA axis
29
30 activation is neither a necessary nor sufficient condition for being depressed, as many
31
32
33
hypercortisolemic individuals are not depressed, nor many depressed individuals are not
34
35 hypercortisolemic (Wolkowitz et al., 2009). In line with this, hypocortisolemia was reported to be
36
37 more frequent in atypical depression, which is characterized by symptoms of hypoarousal,
38
39
40 hypersomnia, hyperphagia, lethargy, pain, fatigue, and relative apathy, whereas hypercortisolemia is
41
42 observed in melancholic depression, in which hyperarousal, anxiety, insomnia, and loss of appetite are
43
44
45 commonly found (Gold et al., 2002; Wolkowitz et al., 2009).
46
47 Interestingly, chronic administration of fluoxetine increased serum corticosterone levels both
48
49
50
in SHAM and OB groups. These results are somewhat in agreement with those reported by Weber et
51
52 al. (2006) that showed an increased plasma and brain corticosterone concentration following acute
53
54 and chronic (14 days) administration of fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) in mice. Moreover, fluoxetine
55
56
57 induces an increase in serum corticosterone levels following acute administration (Serra et al., 2001),
58
59 an effect that was associated with the HPA axis activation, since this effect was blocked by the
60
61
62 19
63
64
65
glucocorticoid dexamethasone (Duncan et al., 1998). Fluoxetine was also able to increase the
1 related with the abundant cholinergic innervations received by this structure. Furthermore, the
2
3 cholinergic dysfunctions may account for the diminished hippocampal functioning and the increased
4
5
6 vulnerability to development of cognitive deficits associated with depression (Dagytė et al., 2011;
7
8 Kelly et al., 1997). On the other hand, reduction in AChE expression in the hippocampus of
9
10
11
bulbectomized mice was reported (Moriguchi et al., 2006; Nakajima et al., 2007), which may indicate
12
13 a compensatory effect.
14
15 Noteworthy, in our study, fluoxetine was able not only to reverse the OB-induced increase in
16
17
18 hippocampal AchE, but also to reduce AChE activity in the frontal cortex of bulbectomized mice,
19
20 corroborating the notion that this SSRI modulates the cholinergic system (Dagytė et al., 2011). In line
21
22
23 with this, treatment with fluoxetine, an antidepressant that increases synaptic levels of serotonin,
24
25 decreased the activity of AChE in human serum and erythrocyte membrane (Müller et al., 2002).
26
27
28 Moreover, it is interesting to mention that donepezil, a classical AChE inhibitor, was able to reduce
29
30 cerebrocortical AchE in bulbectomized mice (Yamada et al., 2011), a result similar to the one shown
31
32
33
in the present study with fluoxetine.
34
35 Regarding the ability of fluoxetine to reduce the activity of AchE, consequently increasing
36
37 acethylcholine levels, we may raise the hypothesis that this could lead to a desensitization of nicotinic
38
39
40 acethylcholine receptors. In line with this, it has been proposed that a fine balance between the
41
42 activation and desensitization of nicotinic receptors is required to yield relevant antidepressant-like
43
44
45 effects (Mineur and Picciotto, 2010). Overall our results with fluoxetine are consistent with the notion
46
47 of an interaction between monoaminergic and cholinergic neurotransmission in its antidepressant
48
49
50
effect.
51
52 In conclusion, the present study shows that OB mice exhibited hyperactivity and anhedonia
53
54 associated with an increased hippocampal AChE activity, parameters that were reversed by chronic
55
56
57 treatment with fluoxetine, indicating that it may be an effective tool to study agitated depression
58
59
60
61
62 21
63
64
65
associated with anhedonia and also for the treatment of this sub-type of depression. Moreover, our
1 antidepressants in the tail suspension test. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2008;32:
2
3 1913-20.
4
5
6
7 Dagytė G, Den Boer JA, Trentani A. The cholinergic system and depression. Behav Brain Res 2011;
8
9 221:574-82.
10
11
12
13 d'Audiffret AC, Frisbee SJ, Stapleton PA, Goodwill AG, Isingrini E, Frisbee JC. Depressive behavior
14
15 and vascular dysfunction: a link between clinical depression and vascular disease? J Appl Physiol
16
17
18
2010;108:1041-51.
19
20
21 David DJ, Samuels BA, Rainer Q, Wang JW, Marsteller D, Mendez I, Drew M, Craig DA, Guiard BP,
22
23
24
Guilloux JP, Artymyshyn RP, Gardier AM, Gerald C, Antonijevic IA, Leonardo ED, Hen R.
25
26 Neurogenesis-dependent and -independent effects of fluoxetine in an animal model of
27
28 anxiety/depression. Neuron 2009;62:479-93.
29
30
31
32 Detanico BC, Piato AL, Freitas JJ, Lhullier FL, Hidalgo MP, Caumo W, Elisabetsky E.
33
34 Antidepressant-like effects of melatonin in the mouse chronic mild stress model. Eur J Pharmacol
35
36
37 2009;607:121-5.
38
39
40 Drevets WC, Price JL, Furey ML. Brain structural and functional abnormalities in mood disorders:
41
42
43 implications for neurocircuitry models of depression. Brain Struct Funct 2008;213:93-118.
44
45
46 Duncan GE, Knapp DJ, Carson SW, Breese GR. Differential effects of chronic antidepressant
47
48
49 treatment on swim stress- and fluoxetine-induced secretion of corticosterone and progesterone. J
50
51 Pharmacol Exp Ther 1998;285:579-87.
52
53
54
55
Egashira N, Matsumoto Y, Mishima K, Iwasaki K, Fujioka M, Matsushita M, et al. Low dose
56
57 citalopram reverses memory impairment and electroconvulsive shock-induced immobilization.
58
59 Pharmacol Biochem Behav 2006;83:161-7.
60
61
62 23
63
64
65
Ellman GL, Courtney KD, Andres VJ, Featherstone RM. A new rapid colorimetric determination of
1 36: 561-69.
2
3
4 Leonard BE, Tuite M. Anatomical, physiological, and behavioral aspects of olfactory bulbectomy in
5
6
7 the rat. Int Rev Neurobiol 1981;22:251-86.
8
9
10 Lobato KR, Cardoso CC, Binfaré RW, Budni J, Wagner CL, Brocardo PS, de Souza LF, Brocardo C,
11
12
13 Flesch S, Freitas AE, Dafré AL, Rodrigues ALS. Alpha-tocopherol administration produces an
14
15 antidepressant-like effect in predictive animal models of depression. Behav Brain Res 2010;209:249-
16
17
18
59.
19
20
21 Lumia AR, Teicher MH, Salchli F, Ayers E, Possidente B. Olfactory bulbectomy as a model for
22
23
24
agitated hyposerotonergic depression. Brain Res 1992;587:181-5.
25
26
27 Machado DG, Bettio LEB, Cunha MP, Capra JC, Dalmarco JB, Pizzolatti MG, Rodrigues ALS.
28
29 Antidepressant-like effect of the extract of Rosmarinus officinalis in mice: Involvement of the
30
31
32 monoaminergic system. Prog Neuro-Psychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry 2009;33:642-50.
33
34
35 Machado DG, Kaster MP, Binfaré RW, Dias M, Santos ARS, Pizzolatti MG, Brighente IMC,
36
37
38 Rodrigues ALS. Antidepressant-like effect of the extract from leaves of Schinus molle L. in mice:
39
40 Evidence for the involvement of the monoaminergic system. Prog Neuro-Psychopharmacol Biol
41
42
43 Psychiatry 2007;31:421-8.
44
45
46 Marcilhac A, Faudon M, Anglade G, Hery F, Siaud P. An investigation of serotonergic involvement in
47
48
49 the regulation of ACTH and corticosterone in the olfactory bulbectomized rat. Pharmacol Biochem
50
51 Behav 1999;63:599-605.
52
53
54
55
Mar A, Spreekmeester E, Rochford J. Antidepressants preferentially enhance habituation to novelty in
56
57 the olfactory bulbectomized rat. Psychopharmacology 2000;150:52-60.
58
59
60
61
62 25
63
64
65
Mar A, Spreekmeester E, Rochford J. Fluoxetine-induced increases in open field habituation in the
1 olfactory bulbectomized rat depend on test aversiveness but not on anxiety. Pharmacol Biochem
2
3 Behav 2002;73:703-12.
4
5
6
7 Marx CE, Shampine LJ, Khisti RT, Trost WT, Bradford DW, Grobin AC, Massing MW, Madison RD,
8
9 Butterfield MI, Lieberman JA, Morrow AL. Olanzapine and fluoxetine administration and
10
11
12 coadministration increase rat hippocampal pregnenolone, allopregnanolone and peripheral
13
14 deoxycorticosterone: implications for therapeutic actions. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 2006; 84:609-
15
16
17
17.
18
19
20 Mineur YS, Picciotto MR. Nicotine receptors and depression: revisiting and revising the cholinergic
21
22 hypothesis. Trends Pharmacol Sci. 2010;31:580-6.
23
24
25
26 Moriguchi S, Han F, Nakagawasai O, Tadano T, Fukunaga K. Decreased calcium/calmodulin-
27
28 dependent protein kinase II and protein kinase C activities mediate impairment of hippocampal long-
29
30
31 term potentiation in the olfactory bulbectomized mice. J Neurochem 2006;97:22-9.
32
33
34 Müller TC, Rocha JB, Morsch VM, Neis RT, Schetinger MR. Antidepressants inhibit human
35
36
37 acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase activity. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2002;1587:92-8.
38
39
40 Nakajima A, Yamakuni T, Haraguchi M, Omae N, Song S, Kato C, Nakagawasai O, Tadano T,
41
42
43 Yokosuka A, Mimaki Y, Sashida Y, Ohizumi, Y. Nobiletin, a Citrus Flavonoid That Improves
44
45 Memory Impairment, Rescues Bulbectomy-Induced Cholinergic Neurodegeneration in Mice. J
46
47
48
Pharmacol Sci 2007;105:122-6.
49
50
51 Nestler EJ, Barrot M, DiLeone RJ, Eisch AJ, Gold SJ, Monteggia LM. Neurobiology of depression.
52
53
Neuron 2002;34:13-25.
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62 26
63
64
65
Porsolt RD, Bertin A, Blavet N, Deniel M, Jalfre, M. Immobility induced by forced swimming in rats:
1 effects of agents which modify central catecholamine and serotonin activity. Eur J Pharmacol 1979;
2
3 57, 201-10.
4
5
6
7 Possidente B, Lumia AR, McGinnis MY, Rapp M, McEldowney S. Effects of fluoxetine and olfactory
8
9 bulbectomy on mouse circadian activity rhythms. Brain Res 1996;713:108-13.
10
11
12
13 Roche M, Harkin A, Kelly JP. Chronic fluoxetine treatment attenuates stressor-induced changes in
14
15 temperature, heart rate, and neuronal activation in the olfactory bulbectomized rat.
16
17
18
Neuropsychopharmacology 2007;32:1312-20.
19
20
21 Rodríguez-Gaztelumendi A, Rojo ML, Pazos A, Díaz A. Altered CB receptor-signaling in prefrontal
22
23
24
cortex from an animal model of depression is reversed by chronic fluoxetine. J Neurochem.
25
26 2009;108:1423-33.
27
28
29 Romeas T, Morissette MC, Mnie-Filali O, Piñeyro G, Boye SM. Simultaneous anhedonia and
30
31
32 exaggerated locomotor activation in an animal model of depression. Psychopharmacology 2009;
33
34 205:293-303.
35
36
37
38 Scearce-Levie K, Chen JP, Gardner E, Hen R. 5-HT receptor knockout mice: pharmacological tools or
39
40 models of psychiatric disorders. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1999; 868:701-15.
41
42
43
44 Serra M, Pisu MG, Muggironi M, Parodo V, Papi G, Sari R, Dazzi L, Spiga F, Purdy RH, Biggio G.
45
46 Opposite effects of short- versus long-term administration of fluoxetine on the concentrations of
47
48
49 neuroactive steroids in rat plasma and brain. Psychopharmacology (Berl) 2001;158:48-54.
50
51
52 Shioda N, Yamamoto Y, Han F, Moriguchi S, Yamaguchi Y, Hino M, Fukunaga K. A novel cognitive
53
54
55
enhancer, ZSET1446/ST101, promotes hippocampal neurogenesis and ameliorates depressive
56
57 behavior in olfactory bulbectomized mice. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 2010;333:43-50.
58
59
60
61
62 27
63
64
65
Song C, Leonard BE. The olfactory bulbectomised rat as a model of depression. Neurosci Biobehav
1
2
3 Figure 1. Schematic representation of the experimental protocol with the treatment period and
4
5
6 behavioral tests period (OFT: open-field test, Splash test, NOT: novel object test and NCT: novel cage
7
8 test). The animals were sacrificed by decapitation 6 hours after completion of the behavioral testing on
9
10
11
day 31, blood samples were collected and hippocampus and frontal cortex dissected, then stored in a
12
13 freezer at - 80° C for subsequent biochemical analysis.
14
15
16
17
18 Figure 2. Effect of OB on the number of crossings (panel A) and rearings (panel B) in the open-field
19
20 test in the pre-operative and post-operative (2 weeks after OB) periods. Each column represents the
21
22
23 mean + S.E.M. of 9-11 animals. **P<0.01 as compared to control group (SHAM); ++P<0.01 when
24
25 compared with pre-operative period. Results were analyzed by repeated measures ANOVA, followed
26
27
28 by Duncan’s multiple range post-hoc test.
29
30
31
32
33
Figure 3. Effects of the chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on the
34
35 number of crossings (panel A), rearings (panel B), groomings (panel C) and fecal boli (panel D) in
36
37 bulbectomized mice in the open-field test. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 9-11 animals.
38
39
40 *P<0.05, **P<0.01 as compared to control group (SHAM-vehicle); +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 when
41
42 compared with OB - vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by
43
44
45 Duncan’s multiple range post-hoc test.
46
47
48
49
50
Figure 4. Effect of chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on the
51
52 exploratory activity of bulbectomized mice in the novel object test. The exploratory behavior was
53
54 assessed monitoring the latency for entering the central arena of the apparatus (area where is located
55
56
57 the novel object; panel A), time spent exploring the novel object (panel B) and the number of rearing
58
59 responses in the central area of the open-field (panel C). Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of
60
61
62 30
63
64
65
8-11 animals. **P<0.01 compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle) and ++P<0.01 when
1 compared with OB-vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s
2
3 multiple range post-hoc test.
4
5
6
7
8 Figure 5. Effect of chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o) in the number
9
10
11
of crossings (panel A), rearings (panel B), groomings (panel C) and fecal boli (panel D) in
12
13 bulbectomized mice in the novel cage test. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 8-11
14
15 animals. *P<0.05, **P<0.01 compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle) and +P<0.05 when
16
17
18 compared with OB-vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s
19
20 multiple range post-hoc test.
21
22
23
24
25 Figure 6. Effect of chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) in
26
27
28 bulbectomized mice submitted to the splash test. The anhedonic behavior of bulbectomized mice was
29
30 assessed through latency for initiation of grooming behavior (panel A) and time spent grooming (panel
31
32
33
B). Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. (n = 8-11). **P<0.01 compared with the control group
34
35 (SHAM-vehicle); +P<0.05 and ++P<0.01 when compared with OB-vehicle group. Results were
36
37 analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s multiple range post-hoc test.
38
39
40
41
42 Figure 7- Effect of the chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on serum
43
44
45 corticosterone levels in bulbectomized mice. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 6-9
46
47 animals. **P<0.01 compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle) and ++P<0.01 when compared
48
49
50
with OB - vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s multiple
51
52 range post-hoc test.
53
54
55
56
57 Figure 8- Effect of the chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on AChE
58
59 activity in frontal cortex and hippocampus of bulbectomized mice. The enzyme activity was expressed
60
61
62 31
63
64
65
as nmol/min/mg protein. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 7-8 animals. **P<0.01
1 compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle) and + P<0.05, ++P<0.01 when compared with OB-
2
3 vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s multiple range
4
5
6 post-hoc test.
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62 32
63
64
65
Figure 1
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 1.pdf
1° 14° 28°
0 15° 29° 30° 31°
OFT
1 OFT OFT NOT NCT
2 3
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 2 - Thu Dec 01 22:56:49 2011
Figure 2
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 2.pdf
Pre-operative Pre-operative
Post-operative Post-operative
A B
250
**
++
100
**
++
200
75
150
50
100
25
Number of Rearings
Number of Crossings
50
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 3 - Thu Dec 01 22:57:04 2011
Figure 3
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 3.pdf Vehicle Vehicle
Fluoxetine Fluoxetine
A B
200 100
** **
150 75
++ **
+
100 50
50 25
Number of Rearings
Number of Crossings
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
Vehicle Vehicle
Fluoxetine Fluoxetine
C D
5 5
4 4
3 3
2 * 2 **
** **
Number of Fecal Boli
Number of Groomings
1 1
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 4 - Thu Dec 01 22:57:21 2011
Figure 4
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 4.pdf
200
50
** 10
**
150
++
Latency (s)
100
25 5
++
50
** **
0 0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 5 - Thu Dec 01 22:57:34 2011
Figure 5
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 5.pdf Vehicle
Vehicle
Fluoxetine Fluoxetine
A B
150 75
** **
100 + 50 +
*
50 25
Number of Rearings
Number of Crossings
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
Vehicle Vehicle
Fluoxetine
Fluoxetine D
C
5 4
4 3
3
2
** ** **
2
1
**
Number of Fecal Boli
Number of Groomings
1 **
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 6 - Thu Dec 01 22:57:53 2011
Figure 6
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 6.pdf
Vehicle Vehicle
Fluoxetine Fluoxetine
A B
75 200 ++
**
150
50 +
100
**
Latency (s)
25
Grooming Time (s) 50
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 7 - Thu Dec 01 22:58:09 2011
Figure 7
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 7.pdf
Vehicle
Fluoxetine
50
40 ++
30
**
20
Corticosterone (ng/ml)
10
0
SHAM OB
ARTIGO~1.PZM:Figure 8 - Thu Dec 01 22:58:27 2011
Figure 8
Click here to download Figure(s): Figure 8.pdf
Vehicle Vehicle
Fluoxetine Fluoxetine
A B
12 7
10 6
5 **
8
+ 4
6 ++
3
4
2
nmoles/min/mg protein
nmoles/min/mg protein
2 1
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
159
CAPÍTULO 5
maceration in ethanol (96%) during fifteen days at room temperature (25±2 °C). Thereafter, the extract
1
2
3 was filtered and then concentrated under reduced pressure (at approximately 60°C). The maceration
4
5 was repeated three times. After removing the solvent by liophylization, this procedure gave 61 g of a
6
7
8 green solid and dry hydroalcoholic crude extract (10.2% w/w yield).The ROHE was obtained
9
10 according to the methodology described by Machado et al. (2009).The extract was kept in closed
11
12
13 bottle at 4◦C in a refrigerator for further use.
14
15
16
17
18
2.2. HPLC profile of ROHE
19
20 The liquid chromatography (HPLC) profile of ROHE was performed according to Benincá et
21
22 al. (2011). Carnosol used as standard for quantification was obtained according to Benincá et al.
23
24
25 (2011). The triterpenes betulinic acid, oleanolic acid, ursolic acid and rosmarinic acid (Sigma–Aldrich,
26
27 Steinheim, Germany) were also used as standards.
28
29
30
31
32
33 2.3. Animals
34
35
36 Female Swiss mice (50 to 55 days old, weighing 35-40 g) were used for this study and
37
38 maintained at constant room temperature (21±1qC) with free access to water and food, under a 12:12h
39
40
41 light:dark cycle (lights on at 07:00 h). Mice were allowed to acclimatize to the holding room for 24 h
42
43 before the behavioral procedure (N= 9-11 animals per group). All experiments were carried out
44
45
46
between 9:00 and 16:00 h. The procedures in this study were performed in accordance with the
47
48 National Institute of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and approved by the
49
50 Ethics Committee of the Institution. All efforts were made to minimize animals suffering and to
51
52
53 reduce the number of animals used in the experiments.
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62 6
63
64
65
2.4. Drugs and treatment
1 ROHE (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.) and the antidepressant fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o., Sigma Chemical
2
3 Company, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.) were dissolved in distillated water and given once a day per oral
4
5
6 route (p.o.) by gavage over a period of 14 days (in a constant volume of 10 ml/kg body weight) to
7
8 mice. Fluoxetine, used here as a positive control, was administered at a dose previously shown to
9
10
11 cause antidepressant-like effects (Machado et al., 2009). The dissolution of ROHE was freshly done
12
13 from the liophylized power immediately before its administration by gavage. Controls received an
14
15
16 identical volume of distilled water (vehicle).The administration schedule and the doses of ROHE were
17
18 chosen on the basis of experiments previously performed in our laboratory (Machado et al., 2009).
19
20
After 14 post-operative days (recovery period), mice were assigned to the following groups:
21
22
23 (I) SHAM-operated/ treated with distilled water for 14 days (SHAM/vehicle) as the control group, (II)
24
25 SHAM-operated/treated with extract for 14 days (SHAM/extract); (III) SHAM-operated/treated with
26
27
28 fluoxetine for 14 days (SHAM/fluoxetine); (IV) bulbectomized mice treated with distilled water for 14
29
30 days (bulbectomized/vehicle); (V) bulbectomized mice treated with extract for 14 days
31
32
33 (bulbectomized/extract); (VI) bulbectomized mice treated with fluoxetine for 14 days (bulbectomized/
34
35 fluoxetine).
36
37
38
39
40 2.5. Bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OB) surgery
41
42
43 After a 2-week acclimatization period, OB was performed according to the procedure described
44
45 by Leonard and Tuite (1981). Briefly, mice were anesthetized with xylazin (20 mg/kg; Virbac©,
46
47
48 Brazil) in combination with ketamine (100 mg/kg; Virbac©, Brazil), diluted in saline (0.9% NaCl)
49
50 administered intraperitoneally (i.p.); 10 ml/kg body weight. The skull covering the olfactory bulbs was
51
52
53 exposed by skin incision and two burr holes were drilled using a dentist drill. The olfactory bulbs were
54
55 bilaterally aspirated using a blunt hypodermic needle (1.0 to 1.2 cm long and with a rounded tip of
56
57
58
0.80 to 1.2 mm of diameter) attached to a 10 ml syringe (taking care not to cause any damage to the
59
60 frontal cortex).
61
62 7
63
64
65
Finally, the burr hole was filled with acrylic resin, in order to avoid bleeding and contamination
at the surgical site. SHAM-operations were performed in the same way, but the olfactory bulbs were
1
2
3 left intact. After being submitted to the surgical procedure, all animals were allowed to recover in a
4
5 post-operative cage (maintained at 24°C) for 3 hours. After this time period, mice were returned to
6
7
8 their home cage. This technique was adapted from previous studies (Leonard, 1984; Leonard and
9
10 Tuite, 1981; Van Riezen and Leonard, 1990; Zueger et al., 2005).
11
12
13 At the end of the experiments, all animals were sacrificed and the presence of the lesions was
14
15 verified. The bulbectomized animals that showed incomplete removal of the olfactory bulbs or damage
16
17
18
to other brain areas (less than 15% of the total) were excluded from subsequent analysis following the
19
20 criteria previously described (Jarozik et al., 2007; Kelly et al., 1997).
21
22 A 14 days post-surgery period time interval was considered to be sufficient to guarantee an
23
24
25 appropriate recovery of the animals, as indicated in literature studies (Jarozik et al., 2007; van Riezen
26
27 and Leonard, 1990, Zueger et al., 2005).
28
29
30 As depicted in Figure 1, fourteen days after surgery (1°-14° Day, recovery period), drug
31
32 treatment was started and continued for a period of 14 days (15°-28° Day, treatment period).
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
8
63
64
65
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
Figure 1. Schematic representation of the experimental protocol with the treatment period with ROHE
29
30 and behavioral tests period (Panel A). The animals were killed by decapitation 6 hours after the end of
31
32 the behavioral testing on day 33. Blood samples were collected and hippocampus and frontal cortex
33
34
35 dissected, then stored in a freezer at - 80° C for subsequent biochemical analysis (Panel B). (OFT:
36
37 open-field test, NOT: novel object test, NCT: novel cage test, Trials WM: training session of the water
38
39
40 maze and Test WM: test session of the water maze).
41
42
43
44
45 2.6. Behavioral Tests
46
47 One day before surgery, locomotor activity and exploratory behavior was analyzed using the
48
49 open-field. Behavioral changes after OB and/or chronic treatment with ROHE were examined by
50
51
52 testing locomotor activity and exploratory behavior in the open-field 4 weeks after OB and 2 weeks
53
54 after the beginning of chronic drug treatment (Figure 1). All tests were carried out during the light
55
56
57 phase of the light/dark cycle. Light intensity was approximately 200 lux. On the first test day (day 29
58
59 of the experiment), 24 h after the last drug treatment, mice were submitted to the open-field. After two
60
61
62
9
63
64
65
hours, mice were submitted to the splash test in order to investigate anhedonic behavior. On the
second test day (day 30 of the experiment), 48 hours after the last drug treatment, mice underwent the
1
2
3 novel object test. On day 31, 72h after the last drug treatment, mice were submitted to the novel cage
4
5 test. On day 32, 96 h after the last drug treatment, mice were subject to training sessions of the water
6
7
8 maze task and on day 33, 120 h after the last drug treatment, mice were subject to a test session of the
9
10 water maze task.
11
12
13
14
15 2.6.1. Open-field test
16
17
18 The open-field test was used to investigate locomotor activity and exploratory behavior, since
19
20
locomotor hyperactivity is the key behavioral feature of bulbectomized rodents. Mice were
21
22
23 individually placed in a wooden box (40×60×50 cm) with the floor divided into 12 squares. Number of
24
25 crossings (number of squares crossed by the animal with the four paws) was used to evaluate
26
27
28 locomotor activity whereas number of rearings (number of times the mice stood on its hind legs or
29
30 vertical exploratory activity) to assess the exploratory behavior (Machado et al., 2009; van Riezen and
31
32
33 Leonard, 1990; Zueger et al., 2005). All the parameters were registered in a 6-min period.
34
35 The apparatus was cleaned with a solution of ethanol 10% between tests in order to remove
36
37
38
animal odors or clues.
39
40
41
42
43 2.6.2. Splash test
44
45
46 The splash test was adapted from Yalcin et al. (2005). This test evaluates grooming behavior,
47
48 defined as cleaning of the fur by licking or scratching, after the vaporization of 10% sucrose solution
49
50
51 on the dorsal coat of mice. The viscosity of the sucrose solution dirties the coat and animals initiate
52
53 grooming behavior, with depressive symptoms characterized by an increased latency (idle time
54
55
56 between spray and initiation of grooming) and decreased time spent grooming (d'Audiffret et al.,
57
58 2010).The grooming behavior included nose/face grooming (along the snout), head washing
59
60
61
62
10
63
64
65
(semicircular movements over the top of the head and behind the ears), and body grooming (body fur
licking) (Kalueff and Tuohimaa, 2004). Latency and time spent grooming were recorded for 5 min.
1
2
3
4
5
6 2.6.3. Novel object test
7
8
9 The novel object test was performed in the same arena and test conditions employed for the
10
11 open-field test, in order to evaluate the exploratory behavior of mice when exposed to an unknown
12
13
14 object (50 ml Falcon tube stylized with colorful stripes, placed top down). In this experimental
15
16 protocol, the novel object was placed in the center of the open-field (wooden box measuring 40 x 60 x
17
18
19 50 cm, with a central area measuring 19.5 x 18.5 cm). The area that surrounds this central part is
20
21 referred to as the peripheral area. The time spent exploring the novel object, as well as number of
22
23 rearings in the central area of the apparatus was recorded for 6 minutes (adapted from Zueger et al.,
24
25
26 2005). The apparatus was cleaned with a solution of ethanol 10% between tests in order to remove
27
28 animal odors.
29
30
31
32
33 2.6.4. Novel cage test
34
35
36 To investigate the exploratory behavior of the animal in a novel environment, a circular blue
37
38
39 plastic arena (d = 44 cm h = 22 cm) with the floor divided into 9 parts was used. The animals were
40
41 placed in the center of this apparatus in the beginning of the test. The number of crossings and rearings
42
43
was registered for 6 minutes (Adapted protocol from Zueger et al., 2005). After each test, the
44
45
46 apparatus was sprayed with a solution of ethanol 10% and wiped thoroughly to clean and eliminate the
47
48 residual odor.
49
50
51
52
53
54 2.6.5. Water maze test-memory reference task
55
56
57 The water maze task was performed in a circular swimming pool similar to that described by
58
59 Morris et al. (1982). The pool was made of black painted fibreglass, 97 cm in diameter and 60 cm in
60
61
62
11
63
64
65
height. For the tests, the tank was filled with water maintained at 23 + 2oC. The target platform (10
x10 cm) was made of transparent Plexiglas and it was submerged 1-1.5 cm beneath the surface of the
1
2
3 water. Starting points for animals were marked on the outside of the pool as north (N), south (S), east
4
5 (E) and west (W). Four distant visual cues (55 x 55 cm) were placed on the walls of the water maze
6
7
8 room. They were all positioned with the lower edge 30 cm above the upper edge of the water tank and
9
10 in the standard setting, the position of each symbol marked the midpoint of the perimeter of a quadrant
11
12
13 (circle = NE quadrant, square = SE quadrant, cross = SW quadrant, and diamond = NW quadrant). The
14
15 apparatus was located in a room with indirect incandescent illumination. A monitor and a video-
16
17
18
recording system were installed in an adjacent room. The experiments were video-taped and the scores
19
20 for latency of escape from the starting point to the platform during the training sessions and the time
21
22 spent in the correct quadrant during the probe test session were later measured through the ANY-
23
24
25 mazeTM video tracking system (Stoelting Co., Wood Dale IL, USA).
26
27 Mice were submitted to a spatial reference memory version of the water maze using a protocol
28
29
30 that was similar to one described previously (Prediger et al., 2007).The training session consisted of
31
32 ten consecutive trials during which the animals were left in the tank facing the wall and then allowed
33
34
35
to swim freely to the submerged platform. The platform was located in a constant position (middle of
36
37 the southwest quadrant), equidistant from the centre and the wall of the pool. If the animal did not find
38
39 the platform during a period of 60 s, it was gently guided to it. The animal was allowed to remain on
40
41
42 the platform for 10 s after escaping to it and was then removed from the tank for 20 s before being
43
44 placed at the next starting point in the tank. This procedure was repeated ten times, with the starting
45
46
47 points (the axis of one imaginary quadrant) varying in a pseudo-randomized manner. The test session
48
49 was carried out 24 h later and consisted of a single probe trial where the platform was removed from
50
51
52 the pool and each mouse was allowed to swim for 60 s in the maze. The time spent in the correct
53
54 quadrant (i.e. where the platform was located on the training session) was recorded and the percentage
55
56
57
of the total time was analyzed.
58
59
60
61
62
12
63
64
65
2.7. Biochemical analysis
1 Blood collection was performed by decapitation 6 hours after the last behavioral test. Animals
2
3 fasted for 8 hours before blood collection in order to cause no interference in the analysis of serum
4
5
6 glucose. The blood samples were collected and allowed to coagulate at room temperature for 30 min
7
8 and were subsequently centrifuged at 3,000g for 10 min. Serum was removed and stored at -80°C until
9
10
11 analysis.
12
13 For AChE determination, hippocampus and frontal cortex were homogenized in potassium
14
15
16 phosphate buffer (0.1 M, pH 8). The homogenates were centrifuged at 2,300g for 15 min
17
18 and the supernatant was separated and stored at -80°C until analysis.
19
20
21
22
23
2.7.1. Serum glucose determination
24
25
26 The serum glucose levels were measured by commercial kit Kovalent, by enzymatic
27
28
29 colorimetric method Glucose GOD-PAP. The principle of this method is based on the determination of
30
31 glucose after enzymatic oxidation by glucose oxidase. The colorimetric indicator is quinonimine,
32
33
34 which is generated from 4-aminoantipipirina and phenol by hydrogen peroxide under the catalytic
35
36 action of peroxidase (Trinder's reaction).
37
38
39
40
41
42 2.7.2. Determination of AChE activity
43
44
45
AChE activity was measured by the method described by Ellman et al. (1961), using
46
47 acetylthiocholine iodide as a substrate in homogenates of hippocampus and cerebral cortex. Each
48
49 sample was assayed in triplicate. The rate of hydrolysis of acetylthiocholine iodide was measured at
50
51
52 412 nm through the release of the thiol compound, which reacts with DTNB producing the colored
53
54 product thionitrobenzoic acid.
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
13
63
64
65
2.7.3. Protein determination
1 The protein content in hippocampal and frontal cortex homogenate samples was determined
2
3 using the method of Bradford (1976), using bovine serum albumin as a standard.
4
5
6
7
8
9 2.8. Statistical analysis
10
11
12 Comparisons between the pre-operative and post-operative periods (SHAM X OB groups) and
13
14 training session of water maze task were performed by repeated one-way-measures analysis of
15
16
17 variance (ANOVA), one-way-ANOVA for test session of water maze task and two-way ANOVA for
18
19 study of the post-treatment period (SHAM X OB-vehicle treatment and SHAM X OB- extract or
20
21
22
fluoxetine treatment groups) followed by Duncan test when appropriate. All data are expressed as
23
24 mean ± standard error of the mean (S.E.M.). Differences with P<0.05 were considered statistically
25
26 significant.
27
28
29
30
31
32 3. Results
33
34
35 3.1. Phytochemical analysis and High- performance liquid chromatographic profile (HPLC)
36
37
38 As shown in Figure 2 the major compounds identified in ROHE were carnosol, ursolic acid,
39
40 oleanolic acid, betulinic acid and rosmarinic acid. Ursolic acid (15.71%) and carnosol (10.03%) are
41
42
43 the compounds present at higher concentrations in ROHE. Although at lower concentrations, the
44
45 terpenes betulinic acid (6.21%) and oleanolic acid (5.73%), as well as the phenolic acid, rosmarinic
46
47
48
acid (5.99%) were also found in ROHE.
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
14
63
64
65
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16 Figure 2. Chromatographic profiles (HPLC) of crude extract from Rosmarinus officinalis L. Peaks
17
18 represent rosmarinic acid (1), carnosol (2), betulinic acid (3), oleanolic acid (4), and ursolic acid (5).
19
20
21
22
23
24 3.2. Effect of chronic treatment with ROHE on OB-induced locomotor and exploratory
25
26 hyperactivity in the open-field test
27
28
29 The results depicted in Figure 3A and 3B show that bulbectomized mice presented an increased
30
31 number of crossing and rearings in the open-field test, as compared to control group (SHAM-vehicle),
32
33
34 indicating that OB induced an enhancement of locomotor and exploratory activities. However, the
35
36 bulbectomized mice submitted to chronic p.o. treatment with extract (10-300 mg/kg) and fluoxetine
37
38
39 (10 mg/kg) demonstrated a significant decrease in locomotor activity and exploratory behavior as
40
41 compared to the OB-vehicle. The two-way ANOVA revealed a significant main effect of OB [F(1,91)
42
43
44 = 37.53, P<0.01] and treatment X OB interaction [F(4,91) = 3.99, P<0.01],but no significant effect of
45
46 the treatment [F(4,91) = 1.08, P=0.37] in locomotor activity in the open-field test. The two-way
47
48 ANOVA also revealed a significant effect of OB [F(1,91) = 33.96, P<0.01], treatment X OB
49
50
51 interaction: [F(4,91)=6.82, P<0.01], but no significant effect of the treatment [F(4,91)=1.36, P=0.25]
52
53 in exploratory activity in the open-field test.
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
15
63
64
65
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24 Figure 3. Effect of the chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with ROHE (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.) and
25
26
27 fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on the number of crossings (panel A) and rearings (panel B) in
28
29 bulbectomized mice in the open-field test. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 9-11 animals.
30
31
32
**P<0.01 as compared to control group (SHAM-vehicle); +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 when compared with
33
34 OB - vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s multiple
35
36 range post-hoc test.
37
38
39
40
41
42 3.3. Effect of chronic treatment with ROHE on OB-induced hyperactivity as assessed with the novel
43
44 object and novel cage tests
45
46
47 Figure 4 shows that OB caused a significant increased time spent exploring the novel object
48
49
50 and an increased number of rearings in the central area of the apparatus as compared to the control
51
52 group (SHAM-vehicle) (Figure 4A, 4B, respectively). These results indicate an OB-induced
53
54
55
hyperactivity in the novel object test. Furthermore, chronic treatment with ROHE (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.)
56
57 and fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) in bulbectomized mice caused a reversal of the hyperactivity induced
58
59 by novelty, since it decreased the time spent exploring the novel object and the number of rearings in
60
61
62
16
63
64
65
the central area when compared with the OB-vehicle group (Figure 4A and 4B). The two-way
was inferred through the latency and time spent grooming in the splash test, as shown in Figure 5A
1
2
3 and 5B, respectively. The results show an increased latency (idle time between spray and initiation of
4
5 grooming) and decreased time spent grooming (anhedonic-like behavior) in bulbectomized mice.
6
7
8 Noteworthy, chronic p.o. treatment with extract (10-300 mg/kg) or fluoxetine (10 mg/kg) significantly
9
10 reversed the increased latency (Figure 5A) and the decreased time spent grooming (Figure 5B) elicited
11
12
13 by OB. These results indicated that ROHE and fluoxetine were able to abolish the anhedonic-like
14
15 behavior induced by OB. A two-way ANOVA revealed a significant main effect of OB
16
17
18
[F(1,94)=20.48, P<0.01] and significant treatment X OB interaction [F(4,94)=2.96, P<0.05], but no
19
20 significant main effect of treatment [F(4,94)=2.00, P=0.10] in the latency to exhibit grooming
21
22 behavior. A two-way ANOVA also revealed a significant main effect of OB [F(1,94)=4.23, P<0.05]
23
24
25 and treatment [F(4,94)=6.64, P<0.01] as well as treatment X OB interaction [F(4,94)=4.10, P<0.01] in
26
27 the time spent grooming.
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51 Figure 5. Effect of chronic treatment mice (14 days) with ROHE (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.) and fluoxetine
52
53
54 (10 mg/kg, p.o.), in bulbectomized mice in the splash test. The anhedonic behavior of bulbectomized
55
56 mice was analyzed through latency for initiation of grooming behavior (panel A) and time spent
57
58
59 grooming (panel B). Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. (n = 9-11). **P<0.01 compared with
60
61
62
19
63
64
65
the control group (SHAM-vehicle); +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 when compared with OB-vehicle group.
indicated by longer latencies to find the platform [F(1,18) = 8.33, P<0.05]. Subsequent Duncan post-
1
2
3 hoc tests indicated that SHAM/vehicle mice learned quicker than bulbectomized mice, since although
4
5 both groups displayed similar final escape latencies to find the platform, the learning curve of
6
7
8 bulbectomized mice was clearly offset to the right, i.e. they needed a greater number of trials to
9
10 satisfactorily acquire the spatial information (Figure 7A).The one-way ANOVA revealed no
11
12
13 significant effect of OB in time spent in the correct quadrant (test session) [F(1,18)=0.06, P=0.81], as
14
15 observed in the water maze (Figure 7B).
16
17
18
Moreover, repeated administration (14 days) by p.o. route of ROHE (10, 100 and 300 mg/kg)
19
20 or fluoxetine (10 mg/kg) did not promote any significant effect on the spatial learning [F(4,48) = 0.36;
21
22 p=0.83] and memory [F(4,48) = 0.38; p=0.81] of bulbectomized mice (Figure 7C and 7D).
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62 22
63
64
65
Figure 7. The effects of chronic administration (14 days) with ROHE (10- 300 mg/kg) or fluoxetine
(10 mg/kg) on the spatial learning and memory of olfactory bulbectomized mice evaluated in the water
1
2
3 maze task. Training trials were carried out on day 32 after OB. Data are presented as means + S.E.M.
4
5 latency, in seconds, for escape to a submerged platform (A,C) (n = 9-11 animals in each group). The
6
7
8 probe test session was performed 24 h after the training trials. Data are presented as means + S.E.M. of
9
10 the time spent in the correct quadrant (B,D). *P< 0.05 compared to the first trial of the same group
11
12
13 (Duncan post-hoc test).
14
15
16
17
18
3.6. Effect of chronic treatment with ROHE on the serum glucose level in bulbectomized animals
19
20
The results depicted in Figure 8A show a decreased serum glucose level in bulbectomized mice
21
22
23 as compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle). This effect was abolished by p.o. treatment with
24
25 ROHE (10 mg/kg), but not by fluoxetine (10 mg/kg). A two-way ANOVA indicated a significant
26
27
28 effect of treatment x OB interaction [F(2,46)=4.11, P<0.05], but not of OB[F(1,46)=1.57, P=0.21] and
29
30 treatment [F(2,46)=0.20,P=0.81].
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
23
63
64
65
Figure 8. Effect of the chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with ROHE (10 mg/kg, p.o.) and
fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on serum glucose level (expressed as mg/dl) (panel A) and on AChE
1
2
3 activity in frontal cortex (panel B) and hippocampus (panel C) of bulbectomized mice. Enzyme
4
5 activity was expressed as nmol/min/mg protein. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 7-9
6
7
8 animals. *P<0.05, **P<0.01 compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle) and +P<0.05,
9
10 ++P<0.01 when compared with OB-vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way-ANOVA,
11
12
13 followed by Duncan’s post-hoc test.
14
15
16
17
18
3.7. Effect of chronic treatment with ROHE on cerebrocortical and hippocampal AChE activity in
19
20 bulbectomized mice
21
22 Figure 8 also shows the effect of chronic p.o. administration of ROHE (10 mg/kg) and
23
24
25 fluoxetine (10 mg/kg) on the activity of the enzyme AChE in the cerebral cortex (Figure 8B) and
26
27 hippocampus (Figure 8C) of bulbectomized animals. As demonstrated in Figure 8B, the activity of
28
29
30 AChE in the frontal cortex was not changed in the group of bulbectomized mice treated with ROHE as
31
32 compared with the control (SHAM-vehicle) and with BO-vehicle groups. However, as shown in
33
34
35
Figure 8B, the activity of AChE in the frontal cortex was lower in the group of bulbectomized mice
36
37 treated with fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) as compared with the bulbectomized/vehicle group. A two-
38
39 way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of treatment x OB interaction [F(2,38)=3.49, P<0.05], but
40
41
42 not of OB [F(1,38)=2.29, P=0.13] and treatment [F(2,38)=1.91, P=0.16] in the activity of AChE in the
43
44 frontal cortex. However, Figure 8C shows a significant increase on hippocampal AChE activity in
45
46
47 bulbectomized/vehicle group, as compared with control group (SHAM-vehicle), an effect reversed by
48
49 ROHE (10 mg/kg, p.o.) and fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.). A two-way ANOVA revealed a significant
50
51
52 main effect of OB [F(1,38)=4.28, P<0.05], treatment [F(2,38)=6.19, P<0.01] and treatment X OB
53
54 interaction [F(2,38)=3.96, P<0.05] on the activity of AChE in the hippocampus.
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
24
63
64
65
4. Discussion
1
2
3 To gain a better understanding of the potential antidepressant of Rosmarinus officinalis, this
4
5 study evaluated the effects of the extract of this plant in the OB model, since the removal of olfactory
6
7
8 bulbs in rodents results in several behavioral, neurochemical, neuroendocrinological alterations,
9
10 comparable to those seen in depressed patients (Kelly et al., 1997; Song and Leonard, 2005). Indeed,
11
12
13 the antidepressant-like effect of ROHE was firstly investigated by our group in two behavioral models
14
15 predictive of antidepressant activity, the forced swimming test (FST) and tail suspension test (TST) in
16
17
18
mice. ROHE produced an antidepressant-like effect, since the acute treatment of mice with the extract
19
20 by p.o. route significantly reduced the immobility time in the FST (100 mg/kg) and TST (10-100
21
22 mg/kg). Moreover, the repeated administration (14 days) of the ROHE by p.o. route also produced an
23
24
25 antidepressant-like effect in the TST (100–300 mg/kg). However, the behavioral tests with predictive
26
27 validity are designated with this terminology because they are based exclusively on the behavioral
28
29
30 effects of drugs used clinically, but do not mimic the symptoms of disease. In addition, another
31
32 drawback of these tests is the fact that they are sensitive to the acute administration of antidepressants,
33
34
35
but the action of classical antidepressants in the existing therapies can take up to several weeks to
36
37 show their full therapeutic effect (Cryan et al., 2002, 2005). Interestingly, the OB model used in the
38
39 present study has been suggested to possess a good face validity with human depressive disorder,
40
41
42 especially agitated depression (Harkin et al., 2003; Kelly et al., 1997; Romeas et al., 2009).
43
44 The behavioral abnormalities induced by OB appear after 2 weeks in rodents; probably because
45
46
47 the lesion caused by OB induces reorganization processes in the limbic and cortical areas (Jarozik et
48
49 al., 2007; van Riezen and Leonard, 1990; Zueger et al., 2005). In the present study bulbectomized
50
51
52 mice showed a significant increase in locomotor and exploratory activities in the open-field, novel
53
54 object and novel cage tests and also an anhedonic-like behavior. These behavioral alterations are
55
56
57
indicative of a depressive-like profile of these animals (Harkin et al., 2003; Kelly et al., 1997; Zueger
58
59
60
61
62 25
63
64
65
et al., 2005). Noteworthy, ROHE, similarly to the antidepressant fluoxetine, used here as a positive
depression (WHO, 1992). In the present study this behavior was inferred by the decreased grooming
1
2
3 time and increased latency to grooming in the splash test in bulbectomized mice as compared to those
4
5 exhibited by control mice (SHAM). This result is in accordance with some studies that have shown an
6
7
8 anhedonic-like behavior in bulbectomized rats (Romeas et al., 2009, Stock et al., 2000). Noteworthy,
9
10 in our study, the anhedonic-like behavior induced by OB was abolished by ROHE and fluoxetine. This
11
12
13 result is in line with the ability the compounds with antidepressant properties, such as the classical
14
15 antidepressants fluoxetine, imipramine and desipramine (David et al., 2009; Detanico et al.,
16
17
18
2010;Yalcin et al., 2005) as well as Ptychopetalum olacoides Bentham (marapuama) extract (Piato et
19
20 al., 2008), which were capable of reversing anhedonic behavior induced by stress models of
21
22 depression. Moreover, this result also reinforces the notion the ROHE has antidepressant properties.
23
24
25 In accordance with previous studies reporting a reduced performance of OB rodents in diơerent
26
27 paradigms used to investigate learning and memory processes (Harkin et al., 2003; Kelly et al. 1997;
28
29
30 Mucignat-Caretta et al. 2006) our results show a poor performance of OB compared to SHAM-mice in
31
32 the spatial version of the Morris water maze. Interestingly, it was shown in our study that OB mice
33
34
35 needed significantly more trials in the training session to acquire the spatial information, but they
36
37 displayed a similar profile to that of SHAM-groups in the test session (24 h later), demonstrating a
38
39
40
selective deficit in spatial learning in water maze task. Important to note, this results is opposed to
41
42 some reports that have demonstrated impairment of OB in both spatial learning and memory in the
43
44 water maze. This discrepancy with early data may be explained by diơerences between the protocols
45
46
47 utilized to evaluate the spatial learning and memory in the water maze. In these previous studies, each
48
49 mice was given 4 trials per day for 4-5 consecutive days to find the platform (Mucignat-Caretta et al.
50
51
52 2006), while in the current study each mice was given 10 consecutive trials during the training session
53
54 (only 1 day) and the test session occurred 24 h later, similar to study reported by Prediger et al. (2005).
55
56
57 Thus, it is possible that a training schedule with a higher number of consecutive trials instead of
58
59
60
61
62
27
63
64
65
repeatedly training over a number of days promotes equivalence in the learning performance for both
strains, which can be observed in the similar pattern of the escape latencies of the latter training trials.
1
2
3 The Morris water maze is a test of hippocampal function (Morris, 1982) that does not depend
4
5 upon olfactory cues, but more on visual cues. A study reported by Van Rijzingen et al. (1995) showed
6
7
8 that two weeks after OB, the Morris maze performance was severely impaired. However this alteration
9
10 is a transient cognitive deficit since the recovery occurs spontaneously approximately 6 weeks
11
12
13 following surgery. Thus, the Morris maze performance of OB animals and SHAM- controls 6 weeks
14
15 after surgery did not show a difference in escape latency neither during acquisition nor during the
16
17
18
probe trial.
19
20 In the present study the chronic treatment with ROHE (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.) or fluoxetine did
21
22 not abolish the deficit in spatial learning induced by OB. This model of depression induced an
23
24
25 impairment of learning and memory in the three-panel runway task in rats (Yamamoto et al., 1997)
26
27 and in passive avoidance task in mice on the 7th and 14th day after the surgery (Hozumi et al., 2003).
28
29
30 The impairment of learning and memory induced by OB in these tests, on the 14th day was improved
31
32 by administration of the cholinesterase inhibitor physostigmine. Additionally, the ability of several
33
34
35
compounds, including curcumin (Xu et al., 2005), nobiletin (Nakajima et al., 2007) and an active
36
37 ginseng metabolite (20(S)-protopanaxadiol) (Xu et al., 2010), to reverse cognitive deficit in olfactory
38
39 bulbectomized rodents in the step down was reported. However, there are few data dealing with the
40
41
42 effects of Rosmarinus officinalis on cognitive performance, but it has a history of usage as cognitive
43
44 enhancer (Kennedy and Scholey, 2006). A study by Hosseinzadeh et al. (2004) reported that the
45
46
47 essential oil of Rosmarinus officinalis injected intraperitoneally to rats 0.5 h before training for 5
48
49 consecutive days improved the intact memory and scopolamine-induced learning deficits in rats
50
51
52 performing the Morris water maze task. A recent study in an elderly population has reported that this
53
54 plant when administered at a low dose caused an improvement on cognitive function but at a high dose
55
56
57
caused an impairing effect (Pengelly et al., 2012). Moreover, in one study of 144 healthy individuals,
58
59 airborne Rosmarinus officinalis essential oil significantly enhanced cognitive performance and mood
60
61
62
28
63
64
65
(Moss et al., 2003). These studies reported that the Rosmarinus officinalis is a promising candidate for
the improvement of memory in healthy people or for the treatment diseases associated with cognitive
1
2
3 deficit, an effect that may be due to, at least in part to its anticholinesterase properties (Duke, 2007;
4
5 Ingole et al., 2008; Kennedy and Scholey, 2006; Singh et al., 2011). Regarding the present study, it
6
7
8 remains to be established if a more prolonged treatment with ROHE, as well as fluoxetine, would be
9
10 able to abolish the OB-induced cognitive deficit.
11
12
13 In a second experimental phase of this study, we evaluated some biochemical parameters that
14
15 could be changed by OB procedure, as serum glucose level, and activity of the enzyme AChE in the
16
17
18
hippocampus and frontal cortex. The ability of the ROHE and fluoxetine (positive control) to blunt
19
20 some of the alterations induced by OB on these parameters was also evaluated.
21
22 This study showed a decrease in the serum glucose level in bulbectomized animals, as
23
24
25 compared with the control-SHAM, similarly to results previously reported in the literature (Belló and
26
27 Rummler, 1979; Perassi et al., 1975). Moreover, a recent study showed that acute hypoglycemia
28
29
30 causes depressive-like behaviors (increased immobility in the forced swim test and reduced saccharin
31
32 preference, an indicative of anhedonic-like behavior) in mice which were prevented by the
33
34
35
antidepressants fluoxetine and desipramine (Park et al., 2012). However, in present study the chronic
36
37 treatment with fluoxetine was not able to alter the reduction of serum glucose level induced by OB.
38
39 Interestingly, treatment with ROHE decreased serum glucose level in SHAM mice, but abolished the
40
41
42 decrease on glucose levels induced by OB, since it was able to restore serum glucose level to normal.
43
44 Thus, the effects of ROHE and fluoxetine on serum glucose level in SHAM and OB mice are quite
45
46
47 different. Indeed literature data have reported that Rosmarinus officinalis exerts notable hypoglycemic
48
49 or anti-hyperglycemic activity (Abu-Al-Basal, 2010; Bakirel et al, 2008). Although interesting the
50
51
52 effects of ROHE and fluoxetine on serum glucose level do not seem to be associated with the
53
54 behavioral alterations described in our study.
55
56
57
Taking into account the well known implication of the cholinergic system with the behavioral
58
59 alterations elicited by OB (Moriguchi et al., 2006; Nakajima et al. 2007) and in the pathophysiology of
60
61
62
29
63
64
65
depression (Dagyte et al., 2011), the present study also dealt with the determination of AChE activity
protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Analytical Biochemistry. 72, 248-254.
1
2
3 Butler, J., Leonard, B.E., 1990. Clinical and experimental studies on fluoxetine: effects on serotonin
4
5 uptake. International Clinical Psychopharmacology. 5, 41-48.
6
7
8 Calixto, J.B., 2005. Twenty-five years of research on medicinal plants in Latin America: a personal
9
10 view. Journal of Ethnopharmacology.100, 131-134.
11
12
13 Connor, T.J., Harkin, A., Kelly, J.P., Leonard, B.E., 2000. Olfactory bulbectomy provokes a
14
15 suppression of interleukin-1beta and tumor necrosis factor-alpha production in response to an
16
17
18
in vivo challenge with lipopolysaccharide: effect of chronic desipramine treatment.
19
20 Neuroimmunomodulation. 7, 27-35.
21
22 Cryan, J.F., Markou, A., Lucki, I., 2002. Assessing antidepressant activity in rodents: recent
23
24
25 developments and future needs. Trends in Pharmacological Sciences. 23, 238-245.
26
27 Cryan, J.F., Mombereau, C., Vassout, A., 2005. The tail suspension test as a model for assessing
28
29
30 antidepressant activity: review of pharmacological and genetic studies in mice. Neuroscience
31
32 and Biobehavioral Reviews. 29, 571-625.
33
34
35
Dagytė, G., Den Boer, J.A., Trentani, A., 2011. The cholinergic system and depression. Behavioural
36
37 Brain Research. 221, 574-582.
38
39 David, D.J., Samuels, B.A., Rainer, Q., Wang, J.W., Marsteller, D., Mendez, I., Drew, M., Craig,
40
41
42 D.A., Guiard, B.P., Guilloux, J.P., Artymyshyn, R.P., Gardier, A.M., Gerald, C., Antonijevic,
43
44 I.A., Leonardo, E.D., Hen, R., 2009. Neurogenesis-dependent and -independent effects of
45
46
47 fluoxetine in an animal model of anxiety/depression. Neuron. 62, 479-493.
48
49 d'Audiffret, A.C., Frisbee, S.J., Stapleton, P.A., Goodwill, A.G., Isingrini, E., Frisbee, J.C., 2010.
50
51
52 Depressive behavior and vascular dysfunction: a link between clinical depression and vascular
53
54 disease? Journal of Applied Physiology.108, 1041-1051.
55
56
57
Del Campo, J., Amiot, M.J., Nguyen-The C., 2000. Antimicrobial effect of rosemary extracts. Journal
58
59 of Food Protection. 63,1359-1368.
60
61
62
32
63
64
65
Detanico, B.C., Piato, A.L., Freitas, J.J., Lhullier, F.L., Hidalgo, M.P., Caumo, W., Elisabetsky, E.,
2009. Antidepressant-like effects of melatonin in the mouse chronic mild stress model. European
1
2
3 Journal of Pharmacology. 607, 121-125.
4
5 Duke, J.A., 2000. Handbook of medicinal herbs, CRC Press, Florida.
6
7
8 Duke, J.A., 2007. The Garden Pharmacy. Rosemary, the Herb of Remembrance for Alzheimer’s
9
10 Disease. Alternative & complementary therapies. 13, 287-290.
11
12
13 Ellman, G.L., Courtney, K.D., Andres, V.J., Featherstone, R.M., 1961. A new rapid colorimetric
14
15 determination of acetylcholinesterase activity. Biochemical Pharmacology. 7, 88-95.
16
17
18
González-Trujano, M.E., Peña, E.I., Martínez, A.L., Moreno, J., Guevara-Fefer, P., Déciga-Campos,
19
20 M., López-Muñoz, F.J., 2007. Evaluation of the antinociceptive effect of Rosmarinus officinalis
21
22 L using three differentexperimental models in rodents. Journal of Ethnopharmacology.111, 476-
23
24
25 482.
26
27 Haloui, M., Louedec, L., Michel, J.B., Lyoussi, B., 2000. Experimental diuretic effects of Rosmarinus
28
29
30 officinalis and Centaurium erythraea. Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 71, 465-472.
31
32 Harkin, A., Kelly, J.P., Leonard, B. E., 2003. A review of the relevance and validity of olfactory
33
34
35
bulbectomy as a model of depression. Clinical Neuroscience Research. 3, 253-262.
36
37 Heinrich, M., Kufer, J., Leonti, M., Pardo-de-Santayana, M., 2006. Ethnobotanyand
38
39 ethnopharmacology-interdisciplinary links with the historical sciences. Journal of
40
41
42 Ethnopharmacology.107, 157-160.
43
44 Hosseinzadeh H., Karimi, G.H., Noubakht, M., 2004. Effects of Rosmarinus officinalis L. aerial parts
45
46
47 essential oil on intact memory and scopolamine-induced learning deficits in rats performing the
48
49 morris water maze task. Journal of Medicinal Plants Fall. 3, 68-76.
50
51
52 Hozumi, S., Nakagawasai, O., Tan-No K, Niijima, F., Yamadera, F., Murata, A., Arai, Y., Yasuhara,
53
54 H, Tadano, T., 2003. Characteristics of changes in cholinergic function and impairment of
55
56
57
learning and memory-related behavior induced by olfactory bulbectomy. Behavioral Brain
58
59 Research. 138, 9-15.
60
61
62 33
63
64
65
Ingole, S.R., Rajput, S.K., Sharma, S.S., 2008. Cognition Enhancers: Current Strategies and Future
in the olfactory bulbectomized rat depend on test aversiveness but not on anxiety. Pharmacology
1
2
3 Biochemistry and Behavior. 73, 703-712.
4
5 Mineur, Y.S., Picciotto, M.R., 2010. Nicotine receptors and depression: revisiting and revising the
6
7
8 cholinergic hypothesis. Trends in Pharmacology Sciences. 31, 580-586.
9
10 Montilla, P., Varo. A, Muñoz, M.C., 1984. Effect of olfactory bulbectomy on plasma levels of
11
12
13 glucose, lipids and corticosterone in the rat. Revista Española de Fisiología. 40, 47-51.
14
15 Moriguchi, S., Han, F., Nakagawasai, O., Tadano, T., Fukunaga, K., 2006. Decreased
16
17
18
calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II and protein kinase C activities mediate
19
20 impairment of hippocampal long-term potentiation in the olfactory bulbectomized mice. Journal
21
22 of Neurochemistry. 97, 22-29.
23
24
25 Morris, R.G.M., Garrud, P., Rawlins, J.N.P., O’Keefe, J., 1982. Place navigation impaired in rats with
26
27 hippocampal lesions. Nature. 297, 681-683.
28
29
30 Moss, M., Cook, J., Wesnes, K., Duckett, P., 2003. Aromas of rosemary and lavender essential oils
31
32 differentially affect cognition and mood in healthy adults. International Journal of
33
34
35
Neuroscience. 113:15-38.
36
37 Mucignat-Caretta, C., Bondí, M., Caretta, A., 2006. Time course of alterations after olfactory
38
39 bulbectomy in mice. Physiology Behavior. 89, 637-643.
40
41
42 Müller, T.C., Rocha, J.B., Morsch, V.M., Neis, R.T., Schetinger, M.R., 2002. Antidepressants inhibit
43
44 human acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase activity. Biochimicaet Biophysica Acta.
45
46
47 1587, 92-98.
48
49 Nakajima, A., Yamakuni, T., Haraguchi, M., Omae, N., Song, S., Kato, C., Nakagawasai, O., Tadano,
50
51
52 T., Yokosuka, A., Mimaki, Y., Sashida, Y., Ohizumi, Y., 2007. Nobiletin, a Citrus Flavonoid
53
54 That Improves Memory Impairment, Rescues Bulbectomy-Induced Cholinergic
55
56
57
Neurodegeneration in Mice. Journal of Pharmacological Sciences. 105, 122-126.
58
59
60
61
62
35
63
64
65
O'Neil, M.F., Moore, N.A., 2003. Animal models of depression: are there any? Human
prefrontal cortex from an animal model of depression is reversed by chronic fluoxetine. Journal
1
2
3 of Neurochemistry. 108, 1423-1433.
4
5 Romeas, T., Morissette, M.C., Mnie-Filali, O., Piñeyro, G., Boye, S.M., 2009. Simultaneous
6
7
8 anhedonia and exaggerated locomotor activation in an animal model of depression.
9
10 Psychopharmacology. 205, 293-303.
11
12
13 Singh, N., Pandey, B. R., Verma, P., 2011. An Overview of Phytotherapeutic Approach in Prevention
14
15 and Treatment of Alzheimer’s Syndrome & Dementia. International Journal of Pharmaceutical
16
17
18
Sciences and Drug Research. 3, 162-172.
19
20 Song, C., Leonard, B.E., 2005. The olfactory bulbectomised rat as a model of depression.
21
22 Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews. 29, 627-647.
23
24
25 Soreq, H., Seidman, S., 2001. Acetylcholinesterase new roles for and old actor. Nature
26
27 Reviews Neuroscience. 2, 294-302.
28
29
30 Sotelo-Félix, J.I., Martinez-Fong, D., Muriel, P., Santillán, R.L., Castillo, D., Yahuaca, P., 2002.
31
32 Evaluation of the effectiveness of Rosmarinus officinalis (Lamiaceae) in the alleviation of
33
34
35
carbon tetrachloride-induced acute hepatotoxicity in the rat. Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 81,
36
37 145-154.
38
39 Stock, H.S., Ford, K., Wilson, M.A., 2000.Gender and gonadal hormone effects in the olfactory
40
41
42 bulbectomy animal model of depression. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior. 67, 183-
43
44 191.
45
46
47 Van Riezen, H., Leonard, B.E., 1990. Effects of psychotropic drugs on the behaviour and
48
49 neurochemistry of olfactory bulbectomized rats. Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 47, 21-34.
50
51
52 Van Rijzingen, I.M., Gispen, W.H., Spruijt, B.M., 1995. Olfactory bulbectomy temporarily
53
54 impairs Morris maze performance: an ACTH(4-9) analog accellerates return of function.
55
56
57
Physiology Behavior. 58, 147-152.
58
59
60
61
62
37
63
64
65
World Health Organization, WHO, 1992. The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioral
1
2
3 Figure 1. Schematic representation of the experimental protocol with the treatment period with ROHE
4
5 and behavioral tests period (Panel A). The animals were killed by decapitation 6 hours after the end of
6
7
8 the behavioral testing on day 33. Blood samples were collected and hippocampus and frontal cortex
9
10 dissected, then stored in a freezer at - 80° C for subsequent biochemical analysis (Panel B). (OFT:
11
12
13 open-field test, NOT: novel object test, NCT: novel cage test, Trials WM: training session of the water
14
15 maze and Test WM: test session of the water maze).
16
17
18
19
20 Figure 2. Chromatographic profiles (HPLC) of crude extract from Rosmarinus officinalis L. Peaks
21
22 represent rosmarinic acid (1), carnosol (2), betulinic acid (3), oleanolic acid (4), and ursolic acid (5).
23
24
25
26
27 Figure 3. Effect of the chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with ROHE (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.) and
28
29
30 fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on the number of crossings (panel A) and rearings (panel B) in
31
32 bulbectomized mice in the open-field test. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 9-11 animals.
33
34
35
**P<0.01 as compared to control group (SHAM-vehicle); +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 when compared with
36
37 OB - vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan’s multiple
38
39 range post-hoc test.
40
41
42
43
44 Figure 4. Effect of chronic treatment of mice (14 days) with hydroalcoholic extract of Rosmarinus
45
46
47 officinalis (10-300 mg/kg, p.o.) and Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.), on the exploratory activity of
48
49 bulbectomized mice in the novel object test and novel cage test. The exploratory behavior was
50
51
52 assessed monitoring the time spent exploring the novel object (panel A) and the number of rearing
53
54 responses in the central area of the open-field (panel B) in the novel object test; and the number of
55
56
57
crossings (panel C) and rearings (panel D) of bulbectomized mice in the novel cage test. Each column
58
59 represents the mean + S.E.M. of 9-11 animals. *P<0.05, **P<0.01 compared with the control group
60
61
62
39
63
64
65
(SHAM-vehicle) and +P<0.05, ++P<0.01 when compared with OB-vehicle group. Results were
fluoxetine (10 mg/kg, p.o.) on serum glucose level (expressed as mg/dl) (panel A) and on AChE
1
2
3 activity in frontal cortex (panel B) and hippocampus (panel C) of bulbectomized mice. Enzyme
4
5 activity was expressed as nmol/min/mg protein. Each column represents the mean + S.E.M. of 7-9
6
7
8 animals. *P<0.05, **P<0.01 compared with the control group (SHAM-vehicle) and +P<0.05,
9
10 ++P<0.01 when compared with OB-vehicle group. Results were analyzed by two-way-ANOVA,
11
12
13 followed by Duncan’s post-hoc test.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62 41
63
64
65
Figure 1 Experiment 1 – Behavioral analysis
Fluoxetine:
10 mg/kg,p.o. Splash
Test
Biochemical Assays:
Serum glucose
Olfactory
Bulbectomy Rosmarinus officinalis: Cerebral cortex and
(OB) 10 mg/kg,p.o. hippocampus
AchE activity
Fluoxetine:
10 mg/kg,p.o.
Figure 2
2
1,60
0,75
0,50 1
AU
0,25
5
0,00 3 4
5 10 15 20 25
Minutes
ARTIGO BOxRosmarinus - MODELO II FIGURAS.pzm:Figure 3 - Tue Feb 14 10:46:36 2012
Figure 3
Open-field test
Vehicle
Extract (10 mg/kg)
Extract (100 mg/kg)
Extract (300 mg/kg)
Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg)
A B
200 100
** **
150 ++ ++ 75
++ + +
++
++ ++
100 50
Number of Rearings
50 25
Number of Crossings
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO~2.PZM:Figure 4 - Sun Feb 19 22:42:10 2012
Figure 4
Vehicle
Extract (10 mg/kg)
Novel object test Extract (100 mg/kg)
Extract (300 mg/kg)
Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg)
A B
60 12.5
** **
50
10.0
40 * + +
+
+ ++ 7.5
+ +
30
5.0
20 ++
0 0.0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
C D
150 75
** ** **
+ + 50 + +
100 ++ ++
++
50 25
Number of Rearings
Number of Crossings
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
ARTIGO BOxRosmarinus - MODELO II FIGURAS.pzm:Figure 5 - Tue Feb 14 10:48:22 2012
Figure 5
Splash test
Vehicle
Extract (10 mg/kg)
Extract (100 mg/kg)
Extract (300 mg/kg)
Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg)
A
80 B
** 200
++ ++
++
60 ++
+ 150
+
++ ++
40 **
100
Latency (s)
20
Grooming Time (s)
50
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
water maze ARTIGO alecrim x BOvs 09.02.2012.pzf:Figure 6 - Tue Feb 14 10:50:44 2012
Figure 6
Vehicle
Extract 10 mg/kg
A Extract 100 mg/kg
60 Extract 300 mg/kg
Fluoxetine 10 mg/kg
Escape latency (s)
45
30
15
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Training trials
B
60
% time correct quadrant
40
20
0
vehicle 10 100 300 Fluoxetine
Extract
water maze ARTIGO alecrim x BOvs 09.02.2012.pzf:Figure 7 - Tue Feb 14 10:51:11 2012
Figure 7
A B
SHAM 40
60
OB
30
45
* * 20
30 *
10
15 *
Vehicle
C Extract 10 mg/kg
D
60 Extract 100 mg/kg 50
Extract 300 mg/kg
40
Fluoxetine 10 mg/kg
45
30
30
20
15 10
0
10 100 300 Fluoxetine
vehicle
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Extract
Training trials
ARTIGO BOxRosmarinus - MODELO II FIGURAS.pzm:Figure 8 - Tue Feb 14 10:49:03 2012
Figure 8
Serum Glucose
Vehicle
A Extract (10 mg/kg)
200 Fluoxetine (10 mg/kg)
150 * * *
100
Glucose (mg/dl)
50
0
SHAM OB
nmoles/min/mg protein
nmoles/min/mg protein
1
0 0
SHAM OB SHAM OB
211
3. DISCUSSÃO GERAL
4. CONCLUSÃO GERAL
5. REFERÊNCIAS BIBLIOGRÁFICAS
BAI, F., LI, X., CLAY, M., LINDSTROM, T., SKOLNICK, P. Intra
and interstrain differences in models of “behavioral
despair”.Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav.70:187-192, 2001.
HALL, C.S. Emotional behavior in the rat III. The relationship between
emotionality and ambulatory activity. J. Comp. Psychol. 22:345-352,
1936.
HUANG, Z., ZHONG, X.M., LI, Z.Y., FENG, C.R., PAN, A.J., MAO,
Q.Q. Curcumin reverses corticosterone-induced depressive-like
behavior and decrease in brain BDNF levels in rats. Neurosci Lett.
493:145-148, 2011.
JANG, S.M., YEE, S.T., CHOI, J., CHOI, M.S., DO, G.M., JEON,
S.M., YEO, J., KIM, M.J., SEO, K.I., LEE, M.K. Ursolic acid enhances
the cellular immune system and pancreatic beta-cell function in
streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice fed a high-fat diet. Int.
Immunopharmacol. 9:113-119, 2009.
247
KIM, S. J.; KIM, J. S.; CHO, H. S.; LEE, H. J.; KIM, S. Y.; KIM, S.;
LEE, S. Y.; CHUN, H. S. Carnosol, a component of rosemary
(Rosmarinus officinalis L.) protects nigral dopaminergic neuronal, cells.
Neuro.Report.17:1729-1733, 2006.
KOS, T., POPIK, P., PIETRASZEK, M., SCHÄFER, D., DANYSZ, W.,
DRAVOLINA, O., et al. Effect of 5-HT 3 receptor antagonist MDL
72222 on behaviors induced by ketamine in rats and mice. Eur.
Neuropsychopharmacol. 16:297-310, 2006.
LI, Y.F., YUAN, L., XU, Y.K., YANG, M., ZHAO, Y.M., LUO,
Z.P. Anti-stress effect of Oligosaccharides extracted from Morinda
officinalis in mice and rats. Acta Pharmacol. Sinica 22:1084-1088,
2001.
249
LU, J., ZHENG, Y.L., WU, D.M., LUO, L., SUN, D.X., SHAN, Q.
Ursolic acid ameliorates cognition deficits and attenuates oxidative
damage in the brain of senescent mice induced by D-galactose.
Biochem. Pharmacol. 74:1078-1090, 2007.
NESTLER, E.J., GOULD, E., MANJI, H., BUCAN, M., DUMAN, R.S.,
GERSHENFELD, H.K., HEN, R., KOESTER, S., LEDERHENDLER,
I., MEANEY, M.J., ROBBINS, T., WINSKY, L., ZALCMAN, S.
Preclinical models: Status of basic research in depression. Biol.
Psychiatry. 52:503-528, 2002b.
PARK, S.E., KIM, S., SAPKOTA, K., KIM, S.J. Neuroprotective effect
of Rosmarinus officinalis extract on human dopaminergic cell line, SH-
SY5Y. Cell. Mol. Neurobiol. 30:759-767, 2010.
PENG, W.H., LO, K.L., LEE, Y.H., HUNG, T.H., LIN, Y.C. Berberine
produces antidepressant-like effects in the forced swim test and in the
tail suspension test in mice. Life Sci. 81:933-938, 2007.
SERRA, M., PISU, M.G., MUGGIRONI, M., PARODO, V., PAPI, G.,
SARI, R., DAZZI, L., SPIGA, F., PURDY, R.H., BIGGIO, G. Opposite
effects of short- versus long-term administration of fluoxetine on the
concentrations of neuroactive steroids in rat plasma and brain.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 158:48-54, 2001.
SEOL, G.H., SHIM, H.S., KIM, P.J., MOON, H.K., LEE, K.H., SHIM,
I., SUH, S.H., MIN, S.S. Antidepressant-like effect of Salvia sclarea is
explained by modulation of dopamine activities in rats. J.
Ethnopharmacol., 130:187-190, 2010.
THIERRY, B., STERU, L., SIMON, P., PORSOLT, R.D. The tail
suspension test: ethical considerations. Psychopharmacology.90:284-
285, 1986.
260
TIWARI, S.C., SIDDIQU, J.S., TUTEJA, N., LAL, N., TRIVEDI, J.K.,
BAHUGUNA, L.M. Serum acetylcholinesterase activity in psychiatric
patients. Indian J. Psychiat. 24:291-294, 1982.
XU, Y., KU, B.S., YAO, H.Y., LIN, Y.H., MA, X., ZHANG, Y.H., LI,
X.J. Antidepressant effects of curcumin in the forced swim test and
olfactory bulbectomy models of depression in rats. Pharmacol.
Biochem. Behav. 82: 200-206, 2005.
XU, Y., WANG, Z., YOU, W., ZHANG, X., LI, S., BARISH, P.A.,
VERNON, M.M., DU, X., LI, G., PAN, J., OGLE, W.O.
Antidepressant-like effect of trans-resveratrol: Involvement of serotonin
and noradrenaline system. Eur. Neuropsychopharmacol. 20:405-413,
2010.
WANG, R., XU, Y., WU, H.L., LI, Y.B., LI, Y.H., GUO, J.B., Li, X.J.
The antidepressant effects of curcumin inthe forced swimming test
involve 5-HT1 and 5-HT2 receptors. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 578:43-50,
2008.
ZHANG, Y.Z., LI, Y.F., YU, N.J., YUAN, L., ZHAO, Y.M., XIAO,
W.B., LUO, Z.P. Antidepressant-like effects of the ethanolic extract of
264